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Biman converts passenger aircraft to full cargo flights to meet rising demand

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Biman converts passenger aircraft to full cargo flights to meet rising demand

AVIATION
Jebun Nesa Alo
17 May, 2020, 10:50 pm
Last modified: 17 May, 2020, 10:58 pm

https://tbsnews.net/economy/aviatio...t-full-cargo-flights-meet-rising-demand-82501

As the world grapples with a severe capacity shortfall of air cargo created by restrictions on passenger flights, Biman Bangladesh Airlines has extended its cargo operations to passenger compartments by converting idle passenger flights into air freighters.

This new initiative comes after global air cargo capacity shrank by 22.7 percent in March compared to the same month in the previous year, according to latest data of the International Air Transport Association (IATA).

Belly capacity for international air cargo – which accounts for 87 percent of the total market – shrank by 43.7 percent in March compared to the previous year.

However, the shortfall in capacity was partially offset by a 6.2 percent increase in capacity through expanded use of freighter aircraft, including the use of idle passenger aircraft for all-cargo operations, according to IATA.

"While there is an immediate capacity shortage, the collapsing economy is expected to further depress overall cargo volumes," said IATA.

National carrier Biman operated its first full cargo flight with its Boeing 777 passenger aircraft on May 15 at 7pm. A ferry flight departed for China from Dhaka, that carried medical equipment from China to Maldives and then returned with 353 Bangladeshis from its last destination, according to Biman.

Before starting full cargo operations with passenger aircraft, Biman sought approval from the Civil Aviation Authority of Bangladesh (CAAB) and the manufacturer of the aircraft, said Biman Managing Director Md Mokabbir Hossain.

He said as passenger flight operations remain suspended due to the pandemic, Biman has converted its idle passenger aircraft into cargo planes to develop business amid the rising demand of freight services.

Earlier, goods were carried in the belly of this aircraft, but now passenger seats will be used to carry goods as well.

This is the first time Biman is operating full cargo flights with passenger aircraft. So, Biman has trained its cargo staff for running cargo operations on passenger seats in order to ensure the safety of aircraft equipment, he said.

Biman also conducted three demo flights for operating cargo on passenger seats, the managing director added.

Mokabbir said the demand for medical and pharmaceutical shipments have increased worldwide during this critical situation, adding cargo operations will offset the loss from passenger flight suspensions.

Following the request from Biman, CAAB issued a guideline on April 13 allowing local and foreign operators to carry cargo in passenger compartments – subject to maintaining relevant safety measures to prevent damaging seats – during the ongoing Covid-19 crisis.

Any airlines that intend to carry out such operations will have to apply to CAAB for approval. The approved airlines are allowed to operate passenger and cargo flights together or to only transport cargo in the passenger compartment, according to the guideline.

Passenger flight operations have been suspended till May 30 in Bangladesh to curb the spread of novel coronavirus, but cargo flight operations remain normal.

US-Bangla, the largest private airline of the country, also started to operate cargo flights from April.

Biman saw a sharp 94 percent fall in export cargo in April and 80 percent in import cargo amid the Covid-19 crisis.

In the first four months of the current year, export cargo fell by 32 percent year-on-year and import cargo dipped by 11 percent, according to Biman data.

"At present, we don't have enough capacity to meet the remaining demand for air cargo," IATA Director General and CEO Alexandre de Juniac said in a recent press release.

He further said volumes fell by over 15 percent in March compared to the previous year, but capacity plummeted by almost 23 percent. The gap must be addressed quickly because vital supplies must get to where they are needed most.

"For example, there is a doubling of demand for pharmaceutical shipments that are critical to this crisis. With most of the passenger fleets sitting idle, airlines are doing their best to meet demand by adding freighter services, including adapting passenger aircraft to all-cargo activity," Juniac added.

The IATA believes that the capacity crunch will be a temporary problem, and the recession will likely hit air cargo at least as severely as it does the rest of the economy.

To keep the supply chain moving to meet what demand might exist, airlines must be financially viable, the IATA said.

Total freight traffic market shares by region of carriers, in terms of cargo tonne kilometres, are 34.5 percent for Asia-Pacific, 23.6 percent for Europe, 24.3 percent for North America, 13 percent for Middle East, 2.8 percent for Latin America and 1.8 percent for Africa.
 
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many airlines doing it these day such practice . what a sad time we have seen


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Well its better to make use of them in this way than just leave to sit idle on tarmac or hangar.
soon there will be tenders for seat covers and seats repairs . the passenger cabin is not for cargo it will damage the aircraft .if you every visited any cargo plane from inside you may know it .
 
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soon there will be tenders for seat covers and seats repairs . the passenger cabin is not for cargo it will damage the aircraft .if you every visited any cargo plane from inside you may know it .

Its true....but leaving on tarmac/hangar for extended periods also creates various issues too...that can cost afterwards if you re-activate. Its not like mothballing, but it is similar.

Interior wise, yes they will have to replace seats, but I think overall its worth it since they are logistically contributing to a crisis, its keeping the aircraft active and also the crew/ground staff etc active too.

Its making the best out of a bad situation imposed on us.
 
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Sir ji last month .. US airline stored almost 8000 airliner in Arizona ...imagine the shortage ...
i am sad for early death of A380 too many airlines store them or planing to quick retired it . it was really luxry to fly on them :cry:
 
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i am sad for early death of A380 too many airlines store them or planing to quick retired it . it was really luxry to fly on them :cry:

I got to fly on A380 cpl times, it is a pity like you say whats happening to it (like all else in history that involved such marvel of engineering+application that very few really comprehend outside of the field).

At one point MD was even going to make a similar aircraft like it (before merger with Boeing and it got canned)...known as MD-12. It would have preceded the A380 actually. One of my professors back in uni actually had several drawings of this a/c concept...having worked at MD previously.

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McDonnell_Douglas_MD-12

In fact it is rumoured (and somewhat substantiated) Airbus poached lot of these MD-12 engineers for the A380 project.

So just imagine an alternate reality with 2 convergently-evolved competitors in this field :cheesy: with some massive growth in aviation from 90s to current period (far more than what has happened in this reality) to support it.

But the issue with a/c of this size (747 was already facing it) was the logistics involved in airport handling for it, not to mention the aviation market dynamics in general where there is only some demand for this level of size that ended up panning out. Profitability became a real issue well before covid era now. This will be the death knell to large degree I think.


@Joe Shearer @Signalian @That Guy @Jungibaaz @Indos @Vergennes @WAJsal @waz
 
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Sir ji last month .. US airline stored almost 8000 airliner in Arizona ...imagine the shortage ...

No one is flying. I see few planes flying overhead when I used to see two dozen a day or more....this is gonna be pretty brutal for the airlines for now.
 
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Putting the planes to work makes perfect sense in these time...let them earn their keep
 
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