China Daily

AIRFREIGHT INDUSTRY REACHES FOR NEW HEIGHTS

Shenzhen airport sees robust cargo growth

- By LI BINGCUN in Shenzhen, Guangdong bingcun@chinadaily­hk.com

The airfreight industry in the Chinese mainland has experience­d remarkable growth, with passenger travel still in the doldrums during the COVID-19 pandemic.

This expansion has been driven by strong global demand for medical supplies to combat COVID-19 and the exponentia­l growth of e-commerce, with more people working, shopping and seeking entertainm­ent online.

The mainland has also been one of the first areas worldwide to make a strong rebound from the pandemic.

The air cargo sector appears poised for another boost this year from the massive distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines across the world.

Last year, Shenzhen Bao’an Internatio­nal Airport in Guangdong province was ahead of its rivals, with its freight volume growing by 9 percent — the fastest rate among the country’s top five air cargo airports. The facility is also expected to outperform most of the world’s top 10 air cargo hubs, which recorded slowing growth in the first half of last year.

Meanwhile, cargo throughput at the Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport was down by 6.99 percent last year compared with 2019.

The robust growth at Shenzhen airport looks set to help it retain its newly found edge in handling freight during the post-pandemic recovery period. The airport has opened eight new internatio­nal routes for cargo — the biggest addition to its list of such destinatio­ns for seven years.

With its total annual cargo volume reaching 1.4 million metric tons, the airport ranked third in China last year, and featured among the world’s top 30 in 2019.

It has been quick to seize opportunit­ies after the initial shocks of the pandemic buffeted the aviation industry.

Zhang Jinlin, a manager at the airport’s internatio­nal cargo center, said he was surprised by the dramatic change in the business outlook last year.

In February and March last year, operations at the airport hit rock bottom because of the pandemic, forcing Zhang to work mostly from home.

However, he said the turnaround came in April, when the airport apron was packed with aircraft from different countries. Zhang said he had never seen some of the planes, including an Antonov AN-124, the world’s second-largest cargo aircraft, in the 16 years he had worked at the facility. Some of the aircraft had been previously requisitio­ned for military use.

One company even sent a fleet of six planes to the airport on a single mission.

Face masks, testing kits and ventilator­s were flown from the airport to other parts of the world to help people in need at a time when the pandemic was being brought under control in China but was raging elsewhere.

At China’s busiest airports, including Shenzhen’s, there was acute demand for exports of medical supplies to fight the pandemic.

Zhang’s team worked night and day to handle the huge amount of work. He lives near the airport, and sometimes had to be called back to work in the middle of the night. Some of his colleagues who live farther away voluntaril­y slept at the airport to save time.

Air cargo demand remained strong last year, but the supplies being shipped changed as the world entered a new phase in the battle against the virus.

Initial demand for anti-pandemic supplies was followed by orders for e-commerce goods, ranging from fitness equipment to gardening tools. Demand for such items was strong in developed countries with burgeoning “stay-at-home” economies.

Vaccines are high on the list as countries look to inoculate their population­s to contain the pandemic.

Wan Jianjun, deputy general manager of Shenzhen airport’s logistics department, said it is ready to play a crucial role in meeting the huge global demand for shipments of COVID-19 vaccines. Wang cited the airport’s expertise in cold-chain medicine deliveries and a rapidly expanding network of internatio­nal airlines.

After airports in Beijing and Shanghai, the Shenzhen facility obtained the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n’s Center of Excellence for Independen­t Validators in pharmaceut­ical logistics in October — an internatio­nally recognized certificat­ion for cold-chain medicine deliveries. The airport also has a 350-square-meter refrigerat­ion center and three refrigerat­ed trailers.

In late November, Ethiopian Airlines and Cainiao Internatio­nal, the logistics arm of Alibaba Group, launched the first regular internatio­nal cold chain route between China and Africa from Shenzhen airport. The route was used to transport temperatur­e-controlled drugs, including COVID-19 vaccines, to Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, via Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

Medical supplies are kept at temperatur­es as low as -23 C along the route — cold enough for the storage conditions required for most COVID19 vaccines throughout the distributi­on process.

The route is currently being used for two weekly shipments of anti-pandemic supplies. Testing of vaccine deliveries began in mid-January and such supplies are expected to be shipped in bulk from the second quarter of this year, according to Cainiao Internatio­nal.

Wan expects the surge in demand to continue, with more vaccines on course to be licensed for use.

In December, the UAE and Bahrain granted marketing authorizat­ion for vaccines developed by the mainland pharmaceut­ical company Sinopharm. On Jan 2, Egypt also approved the emergency use of Sinopharm vaccines.

Zhang Jun, ambassador and permanent representa­tive of China to the United Nations, wrote in an article last week that Chinese vaccine aid has been provided to 14 developing countries and will soon reach 38 more, as part of broader efforts to deliver on its pledge to make its vaccines a global public good.

Vaccine developer Shenzhen Kangtai Biological Products Co has collaborat­ed with AstraZenec­a from the United Kingdom to produce a COVID-19 vaccine co-developed by the latter company and Oxford University. Kangtai has promised an annual capacity of 200 million doses of vaccines by the end of next year.

Last year, Shenzhen airport handled more than 2,900 internatio­nal cargo flights to 46 countries. Industry insiders attributed the performanc­e to the city’s solid foundation­s for the biomedicin­e and cross-border e-commerce industries.

The special economic zone boasts a thriving cluster of biomedicin­e enterprise­s, including Shenzhen Kangtai Biological Products Co and BGI Genomics, a leading producer of COVID-19 testing kits. Ventilator supplier Mindray BioMedical Electronic­s Co is also based in Shenzhen.

The city is an e-commerce hub for domestic and internatio­nal transactio­ns and home to numerous small and medium-sized companies running related businesses that form sophistica­ted industrial chains.

Promising future

Despite the pressure it faces, Shenzhen airport has overcome challenges and enhanced its freight capacity. The changes it has made mainly in response to the pandemic may prove crucial to its ambitions of consolidat­ing competitiv­eness in cargo handling and becoming an internatio­nal cargo transporta­tion hub.

Wan said cold-chain delivery of medicines and other high-value products, such as seafood and fruit, will be a major area for growth.

The progress made at Shenzhen airport reflects China’s efforts to catch up with global air freight leaders.

Mao Lingke, senior logistics adviser at Cainiao Global Supply Chain, said the pandemic has exposed the country’s weak point in air cargo transporta­tion.

China’s airfreight sector has lagged behind some developed countries in building a business ecosystem for cargo flights, internatio­nal airlines and airport facilities.

The pandemic has shown the strategic significan­ce of airfreight in maintainin­g global supply chains, as these shipments involve high-value-added commoditie­s such as biomedicin­es and high-tech instrument­s.

At a State Council meeting in March last year, the central government pledged a range of initiative­s to strengthen internatio­nal air freight capacity. The measures included policies aimed at encouragin­g aviation companies to buy or rent more cargo planes, relaxing restrictio­ns on cargo airlines’ operations, and establishi­ng informatio­n sharing platforms among logistics companies.

Mao said the favorable policy environmen­t would help Shenzhen airport unleash the great potential of its freight business, but he stressed the need for coordinate­d developmen­t with nearby counterpar­ts in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area.

Shenzhen airport has seen a higher growth rate for its cargo business than airports in Guangzhou, the Guangdong provincial capital, and Hong Kong, but its business volume still trails that of its counterpar­ts in the other two cities.

Zhang, the Shenzhen airport cargo center manager, said some business had shifted from Hong Kong airport to Shenzhen during the pandemic.

A considerab­le volume of domestic goods used to be transporte­d to Hong Kong airport via Shenzhen for export. However, due to the pandemic, restrictio­ns imposed on cross-border cargo deliveries have resulted in some internatio­nal airlines and express delivery companies, including DHL, diverting some of their business to Shenzhen airport, Zhang said.

Mao suggested that airports determine their strengths and coordinate planning of internatio­nal routes and cooperatio­n with airlines.

“If Shenzhen airport can make a head start in cold-chain deliveries, it should further upgrade its expertise and capacity in this area into a pivotal business,” he said.

Mao also stressed the importance of further simplifyin­g procedures to transfer goods among airports, especially between Hong Kong airport and those in the mainland.

He said it is vital to improve land routes connecting these airports, including opening more fast tracks for cargo transporta­tion.

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 ?? WANG RENDONG / FOR CHINA DAILY PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Clockwise from left: A bird’s-eye view of Shenzhen Bao’an Internatio­nal Airport, Guangdong province. A cargo plane from the Philippine­s arrives at the airport in April to transport medical supplies. Medical supplies are loaded onto cargo planes from different countries at the airport in April.
WANG RENDONG / FOR CHINA DAILY PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Clockwise from left: A bird’s-eye view of Shenzhen Bao’an Internatio­nal Airport, Guangdong province. A cargo plane from the Philippine­s arrives at the airport in April to transport medical supplies. Medical supplies are loaded onto cargo planes from different countries at the airport in April.
 ?? WANG RENDONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Left: Staff members at Shenzhen airport load anti-pandemic medical supplies onto an aircraft in March last year. in April.
WANG RENDONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Left: Staff members at Shenzhen airport load anti-pandemic medical supplies onto an aircraft in March last year. in April.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Right: Medical supplies are loaded onto a plane at the airport
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Right: Medical supplies are loaded onto a plane at the airport

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