E-commerce has biggest impact on air cargo, not Red Sea crisis, says expert
The rapid rise of fast-fashion e-commerce retailers such as Shein and Temu is upending the global air cargo industry, as they increasingly vie for limited air-cargo space to woo consumers with rapid delivery times, industry sources say.
Shein, PDD Group's Temu and ByteDance's TikTok Shop, which recently launched online shopping in the U.S., ship the majority of their products directly from factories in China to shoppers by air in individually addressed packages.
Shein and Temu together send almost 600,000 packages to the United States every day, according to a June 2023 report by the U.S. Congress, and their growing popularity is boosting air-freight costs from Asian hubs like Guangzhou and Hong Kong, making off-peak seasons almost disappear and causing capacity shortages, the sources said.
"The biggest trend impacting air freight right now is not the Red Sea, it's Chinese e-commerce companies like Shein or Temu," said Basile Ricard, director of Greater China operations at freight forwarder Bollore Logistics.
According to data aggregated by Cargo Facts Consulting, Temu ships around 4,000 tonnes a day, Shein 5,000 tonnes, Alibaba.com 1,000 tonnes and TikTok 800 tonnes. That equates to around 108 Boeing 777 freighters a day, the consultancy said...
This was excerpted from the 21 February 2024 edition of CBC News.