According to www.aircargonews.net, global air cargo demand rose 4% year-on-year in April 2026, reversing a 4.8% decline recorded in March — a drop directly attributed to disruption from the Middle East conflict.
Demand Recovery Amid Geopolitical Strain
The International Air Transport Association (IATA) reported that cargo traffic, measured in cargo tonne-kilometers (CTK), increased 4% year-on-year in April, while available capacity contracted by 0.4%. This tightening of supply pushed the global cargo load factor up by 1.9 percentage points to 46%. The rebound occurred despite persistent operational challenges, including severe disruption at major Gulf hubs — a direct consequence of the ongoing Middle East conflict.
Willie Walsh, Director General of IATA, stated:
“Air cargo demand grew 4% year-on-year in April, driven by strong Asia-linked trade flows. But this positive news masks a more complex operating environment. Severe disruption at major Gulf hubs due to the war in the Middle East continued to reshape trade routes and constrain capacity on key corridors.”
Regional Divergence Deepens
Regional performance varied sharply in April. Middle Eastern carriers registered the steepest decline globally, with air cargo demand falling 18.2% year-on-year — the weakest regional result. In stark contrast, Asia Pacific airlines posted the strongest growth at 10.5%, followed by European carriers (+6%) and North American carriers (+5%). African airlines saw demand rise 7.7%, while Latin American and Caribbean carriers experienced a 2.8% decline.
- Asia Pacific: +10.5% YoY demand
- Europe: +6% YoY demand
- North America: +5% YoY demand
- Africa: +7.7% YoY demand
- Latin America & Caribbean: −2.8% YoY demand
- Middle East: −18.2% YoY demand
Trade Lane Shifts and Cost Pressures
Trade lane analysis revealed pronounced realignment. According to IATA, Africa–Asia trade led growth, followed by Asia–Europe and resilient intra-Asian flows. Meanwhile, Gulf-linked corridors — particularly those transiting through Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi — remained severely disrupted. Jet fuel prices surged 121.1% year-on-year in April, while crude oil prices jumped 77.7%. These cost spikes compound pressure on an industry already managing elevated operating expenses and volatile routing.
Manufacturing indicators offered partial offsetting support: the global Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose 1.9 points to 53.4, and the PMI for new export orders reached 50.2 — both remaining above the 50-point expansion threshold, signaling continued underlying demand strength.
Operational Realities for Supply Chain Professionals
For supply chain practitioners, the April data underscores a dual reality: dedicated freighter operations are absorbing much of the routing shock, preserving end-to-end reliability where scheduled passenger belly capacity has been curtailed — especially on Asia–Europe and transatlantic lanes. Yet the 18.2% collapse in Middle Eastern carrier demand reflects not just volume loss but structural rerouting, with forwarders increasingly bypassing Gulf hubs via alternative paths (e.g., Central Asia or Southern Europe). This shift adds transit time and coordination complexity — notably for time-sensitive pharma and electronics shipments. Concurrently, the 121.1% jet fuel price increase forces immediate recalibration of spot rate negotiations and long-term contract terms, especially for forwarders managing multi-carrier networks across North America, Asia, and Europe.
The sector’s resilience is being stress-tested: as Willie Walsh noted, “The coming months will test how well the sector can absorb continued geopolitical uncertainty and elevated operating costs.” With ceasefire agreements failing to reverse airfreight rate increases — rates remained elevated in April despite the Iran–US truce — the near-term outlook hinges less on macro sentiment and more on measurable variables: Gulf hub recovery timelines, jet fuel price stabilization, and manufacturing PMI sustainability beyond May 2026.
Source: Air Cargo News
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










