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Asia Pacific air cargo demand rises 6.2% in Nov on export strength

09 Jan '26
2 min read
Asia Pacific air cargo demand rises 6.2% in Nov on export strength
Pic: Shutterstock

Insights

  • Asia Pacific airlines saw international air cargo demand rise 6.2 per cent year on year to 6,906 million freight tonne kilometres in November 2025, driven by stronger exports from Southeast Asia and India, inventory restocking and festive-season e-commerce.
  • Capacity grew 7.2 per cent, slightly easing load factors. For Jan-Nov, cargo demand rose 5.6 per cent, underscoring continued market resilience.
Asia Pacific airlines recorded a solid expansion in international air cargo demand in November 2025, with freight tonne kilometres rising 6.2 per cent year on year (YoY) to 6,906 million, supported by stronger export activity across Asian economies, according to preliminary traffic figures released by the Association of Asia Pacific Airlines (AAPA).

The growth was driven largely by higher export volumes from Southeast Asia and India, alongside inventory restocking and rising e-commerce shipments ahead of the year-end festive season. AAPA noted that the seasonal need for time-sensitive deliveries continued to favour air freight.

Offered freight capacity rose faster than demand, up 7.2 per cent YoY to 11,163 million freight tonne kilometres, resulting in a marginal 0.6 percentage point decline in the international freight load factor to 61.9 per cent during the month, AAPA said in a press release.

Subhas Menon, director general of AAPA, said, Asian carriers benefitted from strong demand for timely shipment of goods, in line with historical trends for this period. He added that air cargo demand remained resilient over the broader period, rising 5.6 per cent YoY in the first eleven months of 2025, as global supply chains increasingly shifted towards alternative production bases in Asia.

For January to November 2025, Asia Pacific airlines carried 71,116 million FTKs, compared with 67,366 million FTKs a year earlier, while freight capacity expanded 6.9 per cent. Despite ongoing cost pressures linked to supply chain challenges, AAPA indicated that softer oil prices have provided some operational relief for carriers, supporting the overall stability of the air cargo market.

ALCHEMPro News Desk (SG)

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