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LATAM launches Frankfurt-North Chile freighter

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LATAM Group’s LATAM Cargo Chile arm has launched a weekly 767 freighter service between Frankfurt in Germany and Andrés Sabella Airport in Antofagasta, northern Chile.

It provides 25 tonnes of capacity and is aimed particularly at the mining industry,  mostly parts and components for machinery. The direct service removes the need for secondary connections or ground transportation from Santiago. From Chile, LATAM Cargo, transports high-value products such as salmon and fresh fruit on international routes.

Sales manager for Europe, Jorge Carretero, said: “By offering a direct flight from a strategic European hub such as Frankfurt, we are not only significantly reducing transit times, but also reinforcing our role as a partner capable of providing the network the industry requires across the region.”

LATAM Cargo Chile, together with sister companies LATAM Cargo Colombia and LATAM Cargo Brazil operate a combined fleet of 20 cargo aircraft on domestic and international routes, as well as passenger bellyhold capacity.

Emirates to launch Almaty flights

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Emirates SkyCargo has launched dedicated weekly Boeing 777F freighter flights between its Dubai hub and Almaty International Airport, Kazakhstan. It is its Emirates’ first destination in Central Asia and the city is a growing commercial and logistics hub. The flight on Tuesdays will provide over 100 tonnes of cargo capacity every week for commodities including electronics, perishables, machinery and other consumer goods.

Qatar Airways freshens up CEIV certificate

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Qatar Airways Cargo and its ground handling partner Qatar Aviation Services Cargo have gained IATA CEIV Fresh recertification for their  Fresh product. Qatar Airways first achieved the standard in June 2023 and the latest recertification is valid to June 2029. Between 1 April 2025 and 31 March 2026, it carried over 240,000 tonnes of perishable cargo, including fruits, vegetables, seafood, meat, flowers and confectionery.

Miami Airport gives shot in the arm to Florida economy

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Miami International Airport says its statewide economic impact rose 17% to $212 billion in 2025. Employment tied to the airport’s direct, indirect, induced, and related activities also increased 12%, reaching 945,682 jobs.

Much of the impact was due to airfreight, according to the report by economic and transport consultancy, Martin Associates. MIA’s freight shipments skyrocketed by 13.6% to nearly 3.5 million tons in 2025, making it the busiest cargo airport in the US and the third busiest globally, surpassed only by Hong Kong and Shanghai. Passenger traffic also reached 55.3 million, pushing MIA up two spots to become the eighth-busiest airport in the nation.

A report released in May by Fitch Ratings, said: “MIA is a well-positioned gateway airport that serves a growing Latin American air service market, and it is also an important cargo hub. American Airlines maintains a dominant market share at the airport, but resilient traffic activity demonstrates MIA’s strong franchise strength and importance to both American and the national aviation network.”

KBRA also assigned an AA- rating noted sustained growth in cargo activity and passenger traffic.

Miami-Dade County Commissioner Danielle Cohen Higgins, added: “Rising passenger and cargo volumes at MIA are directly boosting revenue for our trade and tourism sectors and generating more jobs for our residents, as clearly shown in the airport’s latest economic impact study. As Chair of the Airport and Seaport Committee for the Board of County Commissioners, I remain fully committed to advancing legislation that strengthens our County’s largest economic engine and expands prosperity for both our residents and community partners.”

Kuehne+Nagel adds Frankfurt-US to freighter network

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Kuehne+Nagel has added a weekly routing from Chicago to Frankfurt and Atlanta to its ‘Inspire’ controlled air freight network, bringing it to the German for the first time.

Frankfurt handles around 2 million tonnes of cargo annually particularly high-value and time-sensitive goods and, like Chicago, it is a major pharmaceutical production and distribution hub.

The route is operated by a Boeing 747-8 freighter on long-term charter from Atlas Air with a capacity of about 140 tonnes.

Other airports on the Inspire network include Liège, Sharjah, and Taipei.

European Cargo goes into administration

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Bournemouth-based British freighter airline European Cargo has gone into administration. The carrier operated a fleet of converted ex-Virgin A340-600 aircraft based at the Dorset airport and had also launched services to Teesside Airport and Cardiff.

The airline had expended its operations rapidly, first handling PPE during the Covid pandemic followed by large quantities of e-commerce traffic from China. However, the thirsty four-engined A340-600 aircraft that it operated undoubtedly raised its costs to unsustainable levels.

Teneo Financial Advisory has been appointed joint administrators.

As recently as March, the carrier announced a deal for a new operating base at Teesside Airport for five weekly flights from China with total capacity of up to 375 tonnes of freight a week.

Swissport launches in Shanghai

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Swissport International has launched operations at the Digital & Intelligent International Cargo Terminal at Shanghai Pudong International Airport, the world’s second-largest air freight hub. It is the handler’s first entry into the Chinese market as and follows the  agreement signed in October 2025 between Swissport and Smarex, a joint venture between AVINEX Logistics (Shanghai Airport Authority Logistics Development Company) and China Eastern Airlines Logistics.

Qatar gives global energy sector a lift

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Qatar Airways Cargo has launched an airport-to-airport solution for the global energy sector. EnergyLift will support critical, time-sensitive operations across sectors including oil and gas, power generation, renewable energy (solar and wind) and water infrastructure, bringing together priority handling, rapid transfer and specialised logistics features under one integrated product. This includes high loading priority, four-hour tail-to-tail transfers, and the capability to transport outsized and complex shipments. It also incorporates advanced handling for dangerous goods and optional temperature control along with end-to-end shipment monitoring and 24/7 customer support.

Kale and e-Smart combined to offer piece-level tracking

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Kalé Logistics Solutions (has signed a partnership with e-Smart Logistics to combine its Cloud-based air cargo technologies with e-SL’s logistics capabilities. The latter company works with airlines to deliver integrated, end-to-end logistics solutions for e-commerce shipments, increasing the scope of their networks and control across shipment flows. It will improve real-time visibility and transparency at piece or stock keeping unit (SKU) level, giving airlines the opportunity to expand their product portfolios with e-commerce and high-value shipment services.

The partnership will integrate Kalé’s AvSys product, launched earlier this year, which enables piece-level tracking and supports operational compliance.

Kale co-founder and chief executive, Amar More, said: “E-commerce and high-value shipments continue to be growing verticals for the air cargo industry and shippers are demanding more visibility for each package. This partnership provides airlines with the tools to enhance their product portfolios allowing them to compete for traffic by offering the piece and parcel-level visibility demanded and the service quality shippers expect.”

Denis Ilin, co-founder and chief executive of e-Smart Logistics added: “Airlines must know on a piece level what they are carrying to stay safe and fully compliant with current and future regulatory requirements. Kalé’s technology, combined with e-Smart Logistics’ expertise, will allow air cargo carriers to reach a new level of operational sophistication with greater control and compliance.”

Cutting ‘sanctuary city’ CBP resources would harm whole US, warn forwarders

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The Airforwarders Association (AfA)has written to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) warning that any reduction in Customs and Border Protection (CBP) operations at major ports of entry could disrupt vital airfreight shipments.

It follows reports that the DHS is considering reducing or halting CBP processing at certain airports in so called ‘sanctuary cities’, and the AfA has joined Airports Council International and other industry voices raising concerns about the consequences.

Sanctuary cities  are those that have limited their cooperation with federal immigration authorities including the often controversial Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) body, preventing employees and police officers from asking about peoples’ immigration status and declining ICE requests to hold individuals in local jails solely for immigration purposes.

“Any significant reduction in cargo processing capacity at major gateway airports would create immediate disruption throughout time sensitive supply chains,” said AfA executive director, Brandon Fried. “CBP cargo operations are not merely an administrative processing function; they are a critical part of our national security and economic resilience.”

AfA said CBP clearance is essential to the movement of pharmaceuticals, medical devices, manufacturing components, e-commerce, perishables, and other goods that rely on the speed and certainty air freight delivers.

“Airports serve businesses, consumers, and communities far beyond the cities where they are located,” added Fried.

“Disruption at just one major gateway would have national consequences for supply chains that depend on secure and timely clearance.”

The AfA urged the DHS and CBP to preserve current staffing levels at Ports of Entry and consult the freight forwarding and air cargo industry before considering changes that could affect clearance capacity.