According to www.aircargonews.net, the air cargo industry faced severe disruption in early 2026 due to escalating conflict in the Gulf, triggering immediate capacity losses, trade lane closures, and a doubling of fuel prices.
Immediate Market Impact
Glyn Hughes, director general of the Traffic Intermodal Air Cargo Association (TIACA), stated that the Gulf conflict struck the industry “with further disruptive forces” just as it was managing ongoing fallout from the war in Ukraine. The combined effect led to abrupt capacity disappearance across key corridors, particularly on Middle East–Asia and Middle East–Europe routes. According to the report, freight rates “took off” — surging sharply in Q2 2026 — while demand dipped in March 2026 before recovering steadily. By mid-July 2026, month-over-month demand growth had rebounded to a solid 4% to 6%.
Resilience Amid Rising Costs
Despite elevated energy costs and a persistently high cost of borrowing — both cited by TIACA as structural headwinds — global trade activity remained robust. Consumer and business spending continued to flourish, with e-commerce and AI-related expenditures identified as primary growth drivers. The source states that new supply chains were forged and alternative capacity solutions deployed within weeks of the Gulf escalation. For example, DHL Global Forwarding launched a new freighter operation between Southeast Asia and the US on 9 July 2026, reinforcing transpacific strength amid regional volatility.
Strategic Shifts Reshape Trade Flows
The report highlights two parallel strategic realignments accelerating in 2026: “China plus one” production and “US plus one” consumption models. As evidence, TIACA notes that Vietnam has overtaken China in laptop exports to the US — a concrete indicator of manufacturing relocation. Meanwhile, Oman Air is pursuing freighter partnerships and expanding its trucking network to scale cargo operations, with announcements made on 8 July 2026. These shifts raise urgent questions for capacity planning, rate development, and border complexity management — issues slated for discussion at the TIACA Air Cargo Forum in Miami Beach from 26–29 October 2026.
Technology and Innovation Under Pressure
Digital solutions are increasingly central to navigating disruption, yet TIACA questions whether innovation is keeping pace with demand sophistication. The forum will probe whether digital tools — including AI-native logistics platforms like those recently deployed by Westwell and Eltete TPM — can adequately address rising border complexity and fragmented capacity. As noted in related coverage, Cathay Cargo shifted Mumbai operations to the new Navi Mumbai International Airport on 13 July 2026, illustrating how infrastructure modernization intersects with geopolitical adaptation. Similarly, Emirates SkyCargo expanded its freighter network across East and Southeast Asia in Q2 2026 — another measurable response to shifting trade lanes.
Source: Air Cargo News
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










