General overview: SQ and MH resumed their flights to Europe and the UK following conflict in the Middle East. Space is tight ahead of the Labor Day holiday.
Shanghai to London
- Airport operations are currently normal
- Hauliers are working as normal
- No flight cancellations
- Weather is normal
- Space is tight
- Rates are high
Shanghai to New York
- Airport operations are currently normal
- Hauliers are working as normal
- No flight cancellations
- Weather is normal
- Space is tight
- Rates are high
Shanghai to Los Angeles
- Airport operations are currently normal
- Hauliers are working as normal
- No flight cancellations
- Weather is normal
- Space is tight
- Rates are high
Shanghai to Frankfurt
- Airport operations are currently normal
- Hauliers are working as normal
- No flight cancellations
- Weather is normal
- Space is tight
- Rates are high
Shanghai to Melbourne
- Airport operations are currently normal
- Hauliers are working as normal
- No flight cancellations
- Weather is normal
- Space is tight
- Rates are high
Shanghai to Sydney
- Airport operations are currently normal
- Hauliers are working as normal
- No flight cancellations
- Weather is normal
- Space is tight
- Rates are high
Market intel
Chinese airlines to increase transpacific bellyhold capacity
CHINESE airlines are set to increase bellyhold capacity on flights to the US following approval from the US Department of Transportation, reports London's Air Cargo News.
Starting in April, China-based carriers will increase weekly flights between the US and China from 35 to 50, aiming to normalise operations ahead of the summer 2024 traffic season.
Air China, China Southern, China Eastern, Xiamen Airlines, Hainan Airlines, and Sichuan Airlines will collectively operate these additional flights. However, this remains below pre-pandemic levels of over 150 round-trip flights.
The move comes as airfreight rates rise from China to the US.
Chinese carriers anticipate that increased capacity will alleviate some rate pressures on this trade lane, mainly driven by growing demand for e-commerce shipments.
In contrast, US carriers are delaying the resumption of flights to China due to ongoing depressed demand, highlighting disparities in air travel recovery between the two countries.
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