Grounded passenger jets are causing an unexpected bottleneck
From passengers to packages
Using passenger jets for cargo has its challenges.
The planes aren’t built like purpose-made cargo jets, which have large doors for loading and unloading. Airlines that want to put freight in aircraft cabins must shuffle the goods through the smaller passenger entrances.
Chris Busch, United Airline’s managing director of cargo for the Americas, said workers are using “a bucket brigade” — passing packages down a line of people — to load overhead bins and storage closets on cargo-only flights.
The highloader trucks that usually lift food and other supplies onto jets are also being using to load packages, according to Shawn Cole, Delta’s vice president of cargo.
That document, which calls using passenger jets for cargo-only transport an “extraordinary situation,” points out that passenger jets don’t have the same type of fire detection systems as freighter jets. Instead, airlines are required to have a single crew member riding alongside packages in aircraft cabins to monitor for issues.
‘Strange new reality’
Despite the complications, some US carriers are going relatively big on cargo.
United said it has dispatched about 1,300 cargo-only flights since March, loaded mostly with medical equipment, consumer electronics such as laptops or phones, and fresh produce. The airline also plans to remove seats from some aircraft once it receives FAA approval, Busch said.
Similarly, Delta expects to begin clearing out the cabins of some planes by early June, boosting cargo capacity on a single flight by as much as 20%, according to Cole. That process will likely take less than a week, Cole added, and Delta can easily replace the seats whenever passenger demand returns.
Normally, Cole added, passenger airlines bring in less than 5% of their revenue from adding cargo to existing flights. But last month, cargo accounted for as much as 55% of the money Delta brought in, Cole said.
On passenger flights, ticket sales cover the cost of operating the aircraft, and selling cargo space just adds extra profit. Last year, passenger airlines brought in $2.8 billion in cargo revenue, only about 11.5% of industrywide US air cargo revenue.
But on cargo-only trips, freight sales have to cover the price of everything, from the pilots to the fuel costs. That’s tough to do on an aircraft that isn’t designed to handle large freight shipments, Cole said. And it’s a big reason why he doesn’t foresee airlines expanding cargo-only flights far beyond current levels, despite capacity shortages.
Unlike Delta and United, American Airlines — which has flown about 166 cargo-only flights in recent weeks — doesn’t plan to modify any of its planes for cargo use or fly packages in aircraft cabins. A spokesperson cited the logistical issues involved and the requirement that crew members be on board to monitor the packages as the company’s reason.
Bottlenecks
Attempting to funnel the world’s air cargo onto fewer flights is an imperfect solution for shippers, too.
He said nothing can make up for the loss of thousands of flights routes that would normally shuttle packages into every corner of the United States. Logistics companies have had to get creative about delivering to areas that aren’t near major air hubs, where most of the passenger jets and freighters are dropping off goods.
It’s like “putting that jigsaw puzzle together,” he said, adding that using trucks and other types of transportation have grown increasingly important.
The longer air cargo capacity lags demand, the more supply shortages will begin to ripple into stores and hospitals, said Fried, the Airforwarders Association executive director.
“That’s what’s concerning to us as an industry,” he added.