According to theloadstar.com, the AI infrastructure boom is fundamentally reshaping global freight flows — driving modal shifts, accelerating demand for premium air cargo capacity, and demanding new levels of specialised logistics execution. The trend is no longer confined to semiconductor shipments; it now spans data centre servers, racks, cooling systems, and AI-specific hardware moving across continents — with tangible impacts on routing, pricing responsiveness, security protocols, and capacity planning.
AI Infrastructure Emerges as a Structural Freight Vertical
DHL, Expeditors, and Matson all confirm that AI infrastructure has rapidly evolved into one of logistics’ most consequential new cargo verticals. DHL expanded its dedicated data-centre logistics operations in North America in 2026, explicitly targeting hyperscaler demand for servers, racks, cooling systems, and AI infrastructure equipment. The German logistics giant noted that AI infrastructure projects increasingly require highly specialised “white-glove” services — including secure handling, rack positioning, grounding, and installation support inside live data centres. Many deployments rely on charter aircraft for “time-critical shipments”, while operators face pressure to deliver pricing responses within two-to-four hours for urgent air freight moves.
Expeditors echoed this global acceleration, stating in a recent earnings Q&A:
“Data farms are popping up all over the globe,”
and confirming it was shipping AI-related products across the US, to India, South-east Asia, Europe, and the Middle East. DHL added that demand was strongest in the US, but infrastructure expansion was accelerating across Europe, India, Australia, Indonesia, and the Middle East.
Value, Security, and Handling Complexity Escalate
The financial stakes have surged alongside technical complexity. DHL explained that AI servers have become dramatically more valuable — with some units now worth between $1 million and $3 million. This valuation jump directly increases requirements for chain-of-custody protection, physical security, climate-controlled transport, and certified installation teams. Such high-value cargo demands end-to-end visibility, tamper-evident seals, and real-time GPS tracking — capabilities now embedded in DHL’s project logistics offerings for hyperscalers.
Expeditors reinforced the resilience of this demand stream, noting that volumes remain robust despite geopolitical disruption:
“Volumes for this industry are holding strong and we currently are seeing continued increases in volume.”
This sustained growth reflects not only AI chip fabrication but also the rapid build-out of compute infrastructure — a capital-intensive process requiring coordinated movement of thousands of interdependent components.
Modal Shift: Air Capacity Squeeze Pushes Freight to Ocean
The AI boom is also triggering secondary effects across modal networks. Matson, in its Q1 2026 earnings call, reported that rising fuel prices, Middle East disruption, and tighter air cargo capacity were increasingly pushing freight away from air services and into expedited ocean products. Chief executive Matt Cox stated:
“We think we’re entering a period where we’re going to see more airfreight conversions.”
He described the air freight market as “significantly dislocated”, citing passenger airline route cuts and elevated jet fuel costs — factors that disproportionately impact time-sensitive AI hardware shipments.
Matson said it had benefited from elevated freight costs and reduced air cargo capacity in select markets, particularly as carriers withdrew marginal routes. The company also highlighted strong demand for data centre servers and racks moving from Asia into the US market — a flow increasingly routed via expedited ocean services to balance cost, reliability, and transit time.
Geopolitics and Manufacturing Diversification Amplify Impact
Broader geopolitical uncertainty is compounding these dynamics. Expeditors attributed tightened air cargo capacity and increased jet fuel costs directly to the Middle East conflict, forcing logistics providers to implement alternative routings and contingency plans — a response the company likened to pandemic-era adaptations. Concurrently, manufacturers continue shifting production out of China into Vietnam and Thailand, where Matson reports strong growth from feeder services. This dual pressure — AI-driven infrastructure demand and supply chain reconfiguration — is creating entirely new trade lanes and freight corridors stretching from South-east Asia through the Middle East to North America.
Source: The Loadstar
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










