According to theloadstar.com, Cargolux reported a net profit of $465 million for 2025, following $448 million in 2024 — figures that remain historically strong compared with most years between 2011 and 2020. The airline’s financial trajectory mirrors broader air cargo market dynamics: from the weak-yield mid-2010s, through the extraordinary pandemic-driven boom of 2021–2022, to today’s structurally higher but increasingly fragmented ‘new normal’. Cargolux chief executive Richard Forson, who has led the Luxembourg-based carrier since 2022, underscored growing operational asymmetries during a recent interview, stating:
“We are all not competing on the same basis anymore.” — Richard Forson, CEO of Cargolux
Freighter Fleet Delays Signal Structural Supply Constraints
While overcapacity plagued the industry a decade ago, today’s dominant challenge is constrained supply. Cargolux recently confirmed that its Boeing 777-8F deliveries have slipped from 2027 to 2029, reflecting systemic bottlenecks across the global freighter replacement cycle. This delay is not isolated: Atlas Air, Flexport, and other operators have cited similar Boeing programme setbacks in public filings and earnings calls throughout May 2026. Older aircraft — including Boeing 747-400Fs originally slated for retirement by 2020 — remain economically viable due to sustained demand, particularly for high-value, time-sensitive shipments. According to the report, this extended service life signals a fundamental shift: carriers are no longer battling excess capacity but managing persistent scarcity.
Geopolitical Friction Drives Uneven Operating Costs
European cargo airlines face mounting structural disadvantages tied to geopolitical disruption. The closure of Russian airspace — in effect since February 2022 — forces Europe–Asia flights to detour up to 3,000 km, adding fuel burn, crew duty time, and maintenance cycles. Lufthansa Cargo reported €324 million ($375 million) in adjusted EBIT for 2025, a 29% year-on-year increase, yet explicitly attributed part of that gain to tighter market conditions driven by these capacity constraints. Meanwhile, non-European carriers continue operating shorter routings without equivalent regulatory burdens. The European Union’s binding Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) mandates — requiring 2% SAF blending by 2025, rising to 6% by 2030 — further widen the cost gap. These obligations apply to all EU-based airlines, including Cargolux, while competitors in Southeast Asia and the Middle East operate under no such requirements.
New Demand Drivers Offset Legacy Pressures
Several structural demand shifts now anchor the market at a higher baseline. Ecommerce continues expanding globally, supporting consistent belly-cargo volumes even as passenger traffic recovers. Manufacturing realignment — notably the gradual shift of electronics production from China into Vietnam, Malaysia, and Thailand — has reshaped lane economics. AI infrastructure cargo, which barely existed as a measurable segment before 2021, now accounts for an estimated 12–15% of premium air freight tonnage on key transpacific routes, per data from Freightos and the International Air Transport Association (IATA). That growth coincides with acute supply-side stress: the Strait of Hormuz remains intermittently disrupted due to ongoing regional conflict, threatening helium supplies critical for AI server cooling — a risk flagged directly by Cargolux CEO Forson in a 13 May 2026 statement warning that “jet fuel will be the least of our worries.”
Resilience Amid Fragmentation
Cargolux’s results serve as a long-standing proxy for air cargo health — and the data suggests stabilization at a materially elevated level. Yet this resilience coexists with deepening fragmentation: divergent regulatory regimes, uneven access to airspace, and lopsided fleet modernization timelines. When Cargolux posted a net loss in 2011, it cited high fuel prices, rising leasing costs, and B747-8F delivery delays — themes echoed in its 2025 annual report. The critical difference today is demand strength: rather than fighting overcapacity, carriers now compete for scarce slots, limited freighter availability, and premium cargo contracts amid semi-permanent geopolitical disruption. For supply chain professionals, this means longer lead times for aircraft-related capacity planning, heightened volatility in spot rates on Asia–Europe lanes, and increased need for multi-carrier contingency routing — especially given that over 60% of Cargolux’s 2025 revenue originated from Asia–Europe corridors.
Source: The Loadstar
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










