Explore

  • Trending
  • Latest
  • Tools
  • Browse
  • AI Assistant
  • Subscription Feed

Logistics

  • Ocean
  • Air Cargo
  • Road & Rail
  • Warehousing
  • Last Mile

Regions

  • Southeast Asia
  • South Asia
  • Central Asia
  • Japan & Korea
  • Middle East
  • Europe
  • Russia
  • Africa
  • North America
  • Latin America
  • Australia
SCI.AI
  • Supply Chain
    • Strategy & Planning
    • Logistics & Transport
    • Manufacturing
    • Inventory & Fulfillment
  • Procurement
    • Strategic Sourcing
    • Supplier Management
    • Supply Chain Finance
  • Technology
    • AI & Automation
    • Robotics
    • Digital Platforms
  • Risk & Resilience
  • Sustainability
  • Research
  • Expert Columns
  • English
    • Chinese
    • English
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
SCI.AI
No Result
View All Result
Home Supply Chain Logistics & Transport

AI Boom Drives Air Cargo Growth to 2028 — The Loadstar

2026/06/09
in Logistics & Transport, Supply Chain
0 0
AI Boom Drives Air Cargo Growth to 2028 — The Loadstar

Chipmakers are booked out until 2028, data-centre investment is surging and AI-related cargo is increasingly carrying the wider air freight market.

While ecommerce volumes soften and general cargo demand remains uneven, shipments linked to semiconductors, servers, and data-centre infrastructure are generating some of the strongest growth seen anywhere in the industry.

By Alex Lennane | 2026-06-08

Demand Surges Amid Broader Softness

“Depending on which customer or company you speak to, they’re talking about being booked-out until end of next year, some even until end 2028,” Morrison Express group CEO Asok Kumar told The Loadstar.

“Many are saying this will continue till 2030.”

The market data backs up the optimism. According to consultancy Aevean, US air imports grew 11% year on year in the first quarter, but almost all of that increase came from hi-tech cargo. Those imports surged 70% to 401,000 tonnes, while ecommerce volumes fell 11%, and other general cargo rose just 2%.

Expanding Ecosystem of AI-Driven Shipments

The demand extends well beyond chipmakers themselves.

“It could be the companies making the memory chips, the companies that make the machines that help make the memory chips, the CPU manufacturers, OEMs that manufacture these goods,” Mr Kumar explained. “Their orderbooks all seem to be full.”

Aevean’s data suggests the boom is increasingly centred on data centre infrastructure. The consultancy claims data centre-related air cargo volumes grew 42% last year, led by a 65% increase in GPUs and AI accelerators, and a 70% rise in networking equipment.

Aevean

Reshaping Global Trade Flows

That growth is now reshaping trade flows.

Morrison Express is seeing its strongest demand on intra-Asia routes, followed by transpacific services into North America, where investment in chip fabrication plants and data centres continues at pace.

“There’s a lot of investment in Arizona, Texas, and other locations,” said Mr Kumar. “Movements are following that as well. It’s very aligned with what we’re reading and hearing in the market.”

That picture is reflected in wider market data. At the TIACA Executive Summit in Warsaw, WorldACD reported that Asia-Pacific accounted for around 80% of global air cargo growth this year, with South-east Asia overtaking China as the largest source of absolute tonnage growth.

Meanwhile, hi-tech was identified as one of the strongest-performing product categories in the market. The strength of AI-related demand is particularly significant, because it stands in contrast to much of the broader market.

Xeneta last week said there were “not a lot of industry verticals that are booming at the moment”, identifying AI-related shipments linked to semiconductors and data centres as the clearest source of growth, particularly on transpacific routes.

Capacity Constraints Push Rates Higher

At the same time, capacity growth remains relatively constrained. Aevean estimates international air cargo capacity is only around 1.2% above 2025 levels, the Middle East conflict continuing to suppress growth, despite significant recovery since the early stages of the crisis. Direct Asia-Europe capacity is up 11% year on year, and transpacific capacity 6%, but overall market growth remains subdued.

This imbalance between fast-growing demand and limited capacity helps explain why air freight rates remain elevated.

According to Xeneta, global spot rates averaged $3.40 per kg in May, up 41% year on year, while in late May WorldACD reported worldwide rates 36% higher than a year earlier.

Operational Challenges and Fleet Adaptation

The AI boom is also creating new operational challenges.

“As the chips get smaller, the technology gets higher, and ironically, the machines to make them get larger,” he said. “And then you have a problem with the planes, because they cannot accommodate them.”

As a result, Morrison Express has secured dedicated 747 freighter capacity from airline partners to support key customers moving oversized equipment.

This may offer another lease of life for the ageing 747 freighter fleet, whose nose-loading capability remains difficult to replace when transporting oversized industrial equipment.

Uncertainties Ahead

Questions remain over how long the current investment cycle can continue. Aevean itself highlighted the possibility of an eventual AI bubble alongside continued geopolitical uncertainty and shifting trade patterns.

For now, however, few in the industry appear worried.

“Certainly this segment of business, and anyone involved in it, is seeing tremendous growth,” said Mr Kumar.

At a time when ecommerce is facing regulatory headwinds, consumer markets remain uneven, and airlines are still navigating the fallout from the Middle East conflict, AI has emerged as the air cargo industry’s most powerful growth engine.

Check out today’s News in Brief podcast, featuring exclusive content from Glyn Hughes, DG, TIACA, and The Loadstar‘s Gavin van Marle

Source: The Loadstar

Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.

More on This Topic

  • Cargo Theft Surges, Rail Attacks Double to 10% in 2025 (Jun 13, 2026)
  • Los Angeles port handles 950,000 TEUs in July amid tariff frontloading (Jun 13, 2026)
  • Air freight rates up 32.7% YoY amid AI demand, Gulf capacity gaps (Jun 13, 2026)
  • Gatik inks multi-year autonomous freight deal with PepsiCo (Jun 13, 2026)
  • Shipping industry fights talent shortage amid 2M-seafarer workforce (Jun 13, 2026)
ShareTweet

Related Posts

Cargo Theft Surges, Rail Attacks Double to 10% in 2025
AI & Automation

Cargo Theft Surges, Rail Attacks Double to 10% in 2025

June 13, 2026
0
Los Angeles port handles 950,000 TEUs in July amid tariff frontloading
AI & Automation

Los Angeles port handles 950,000 TEUs in July amid tariff frontloading

June 13, 2026
0
Air freight rates up 32.7% YoY amid AI demand, Gulf capacity gaps
AI & Automation

Air freight rates up 32.7% YoY amid AI demand, Gulf capacity gaps

June 13, 2026
1
Gatik inks multi-year autonomous freight deal with PepsiCo
Manufacturing

Gatik inks multi-year autonomous freight deal with PepsiCo

June 13, 2026
0
Shipping industry fights talent shortage amid 2M-seafarer workforce
Manufacturing

Shipping industry fights talent shortage amid 2M-seafarer workforce

June 13, 2026
0
Walmart, Wing scale drone delivery to 7 new markets
Last Mile

Walmart, Wing scale drone delivery to 7 new markets

June 13, 2026
0

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

India FDI Up 13% to $50.01B in FY 2024–25

India FDI Up 13% to $50.01B in FY 2024–25

27 Views
April 23, 2026
全球干扰与电子商务推动九月航空货运量增长

Global Disruptions and E-commerce Drive September Air Cargo Volumes Up

24 Views
February 15, 2026
Samsung’s 2030 AI Factory Plan: 60% of Firms Stalled by Tariffs but 98% Bet on GenAI to Transform Supply Chains

Samsung’s 2030 AI Factory Plan: 60% of Firms Stalled by Tariffs but 98% Bet on GenAI to Transform Supply Chains

18 Views
March 7, 2026
Target names Jeff England as new supply chain chief

Target names Jeff England as new supply chain chief

17 Views
May 20, 2026
Show More

SCI.AI

Global Supply Chain Intelligence. Delivering real-time news, analysis, and insights for supply chain professionals worldwide.

Categories

  • Supply Chain Management
  • Procurement
  • Technology

 

  • Risk & Resilience
  • Sustainability
  • Research

© 2026 SCI.AI. All rights reserved.

Powered by SCI.AI Intelligence Platform

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Facebook
Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Sign Up with Facebook
Sign Up with Google
Sign Up with Linked In
OR

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Scan to share via WeChat

Open WeChat and scan the QR code to share

QR Code

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Supply Chain
    • Strategy & Planning
    • Logistics & Transport
    • Manufacturing
    • Inventory & Fulfillment
  • Procurement
    • Strategic Sourcing
    • Supplier Management
    • Supply Chain Finance
  • Technology
    • AI & Automation
    • Robotics
    • Digital Platforms
  • Risk & Resilience
  • Sustainability
  • Research
  • Expert Columns
  • English
    • Chinese
    • English
  • Login
  • Sign Up

© 2026 SCI.AI