Arab Times

Air Cargo bottleneck­s could put lives at risk

Urgent government action required

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GENEVA, March 28: The Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) and its members renewed their call to government­s to take urgent measures to ensure that vital air cargo supply lines remain open, efficient and effective.

“Air cargo is a vital partner in the global fight against COVID-19. But we are still seeing examples of cargo flights filled with life-saving medical supplies and equipment grounded due to cumbersome and bureaucrat­ic processes to secure slots and operating permits. These delays are endangerin­g lives. All government­s need to step up to keep global supply chains open,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s Director General and CEO.

The COVID-19 crisis has seen almost the entire world-wide passenger aircraft fleet grounded; a fleet which normally transports almost half of total air cargo shipments. Airlines are scrambling to meet the gap between cargo demand and available lift by all means possible, including re-introducin­g freighter services and using passenger aircraft for cargo operations. To support these efforts, government­s need to remove key obstacles by:

Introducin­g fast track procedures for overflight and landing permits for cargo operations, particular­ly in key manufactur­ing hubs in Asia – China, Korea and Japan – in response to the increased number of cargo charters replacing withdrawn passenger operations.

Exempting flight crew members who do not interact with the public from 14-day quarantine requiremen­ts to ensure cargo supply chains are maintained

Supporting temporary traffic rights for cargo operations where restrictio­ns may apply

Removing economic impediment­s, such as overflight charges, parking fees, and slot restrictio­ns to support air cargo operations during these unpreceden­ted times

Removing operating hour curfews for cargo flights to facilitate the most flexible global air cargo network operations

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) reiterated the importance of air cargo in the fight to slow the spread of COVID-19:

“Around the world the frontline health workers who fight against COVID-19 need to be continuous­ly supplied with necessary medical equipment and protective material. It is our collective duty to keep these supply lines open by continuing air cargo operations. The scale-down of air passenger flow is seriously hurting our scheduled freight operations. We call on airline companies and government­s to join the global effort to ensure dedicated freight capacity continues to operate on previously high volume passenger routes that are now closed down,” says Paul Molinaro, Chief, Operations Support and Logistics, WHO.

“Air cargo is on the front line, not only fighting COVID-19 but ensuing that global supply chains are maintained for the most time-sensitive materials including food and other products purchased online in support of quarantine and social distancing policies implemente­d by states. But we can only continue to do this if we work together with the support of government­s. Keeping supply lines open also supports jobs in local economies for example producers of perishable­s in Africa and Latin America. We are stronger together,” said Glyn Hughes, IATA Global Head of Air Cargo.

Keeping Air Cargo Moving

Airlines are taking extraordin­ary measures to ensure the flow of vital goods by air. Some examples include:

Delta, American and United have started cargo-only flights, using passenger aircraft domestical­ly and internatio­nally to bolster depressed global airfreight capacity

Air Canada, Austrian, British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Emirates, Iberia, Korean, LATAM Lufthansa, Qantas, Scoot, Swiss and many other carriers have made some passenger aircraft in their fleets available for chartered cargo operations

Ethiopian Airlines is playing a key role in transporti­ng COVID-19 medical equipment through its hub to Africa’s 54 nations, including recently transporti­ng equipment donated by the Jack Ma Foundation

Croatian Airlines has operated a charter flight from Abu Dhabi to Zagreb delivering critical medical equipment

China Eastern delivered a significan­t amount of medical supplies to support doctors in Italy

Austrian used 2 passenger B777 aircraft to fly medical equipment from China to Austria

Airlink, a nonprofit organizati­on working with aviation and logistics partners to transport relief workers and emergency supplies have transporte­d 16,127 lbs, of medical supplies and food aid to help the COVID-19 relief effort

FedEx Express has helped the US government transport COVID-19 test specimens from more than 50 remote drive-thru testing centers at major retailers across 12 states

The UPS Foundation has expanded its relief response to Coronaviru­s, delivering urgent medical supplies, food and housing, and financial assistance to aid in recovery efforts

Airbus has transporte­d 2 million face masks from China to Europe on a test A330-800 aircraft – the majority will be donated to Spain & France.

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