WEEKLY NEWS
AIR CARG O WEEK
ISSUES SWIRL OVER AIRFREIGHT’S FUTURE
BY Edward HARDY
LANE mapping is becoming more widely used to ensure the supply chain performs well from a quality and compliance perspective, but at the same time it is giving people that visibility to ask, what are the other options? There are a lot of platforms in the industry that
provide the opportunity to say here is a pharma product that has this temperature requirement and needs to go from here to here. Some of these platforms are trying to sign
people up to provide information such as which airline has a temperature-controlled facility at
that origin and the same facility at the
destination, and they have four direct flights a day.
That type of technology is being made more
widely available to the shippers, providing the level of detail even down to the ground handling capabilities that are available in those countries and destinations. There
is another technology being pushed
within the market, some of which is because of real-time data logging: there is a big push currently for invoice auditing. Companies approach the shippers who are
moving the product, offering to redesign their supply chain, make it more efficient, take out cost and improve performance. However, their starting point is to request they
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do an audit of the company’s invoices. They want the invoices from the courier and within that will be details of the airline involved in the shipping supply chain. “The primary contract between a pharma
company will always be a courier or freight forwarder who will organise and book the air freight direct
requirements. The airlines rarely have involvement with the shipper, and they
rarely have a billing relationship with them,” Steve Healy, Vice President, CEO of COREX Logistics, explained. “They are auditing the invoices and claiming
overcharges, however what that doesn’t consider is the nuances of pharmaceuticals and clinical trials. “Simply auditing invoices will never be the
complete picture and there is an argument that if you need that service, your internal logistics team or finance team are missing a trick. “Therefore, if you were to manage your suppliers
more effectively from the outset, tell them how you want billing and invoice breakdowns you should be able to cover those elements anyway. “There are a lot more platforms out there which
are trying to give visibility on performance and price. “We are also seeing an increase whereby
premium couriers are trying to develop better relationships with commercial airlines.
Labour challenges As a result of Covid-19, some airlines have gone down the route of hire and refire. There were massive issues in airport
you need high levels of training and security clearance. “If you have experienced people leaving the
profession, even if you can recruit, you are taking on people without experience who will need to go through the necessary training,” Healy highlighted. “It is not just about recruitment, you need
to retain the talent with the on-the-ground, operational experience as well.” Shipping high-value pharma payloads requires level
another of experience and expertise
especially when shipping dangerous goods. The airline will need to have a dangerous goods safety advisor on site, someone who must check and sign off on whether there is the correct labelling on a box, or if it is in limited quantities. “We need to have that qualified dangerous
goods person on site and if there is not, your cargo may not fly,” he added. “It is really important to retain the talent because even if airlines can recruit and replace they will still lack the on-the- ground operational experience.”
Regulations reshape airfreight Environmental, Social and Governance, five years ago were just buzzwords, then three years ago people started including them as part of a request and they would score companies on it, even if it wasn’t so much of a decision making factor. Now it is firmly is front and centre - particularly
if companies are trying to win business away from someone, they must be strong in that area. “I was in South Africa and met with several
pharma companies and within their own strategy of one of these global pharma companies, they had to ask themselves the question three times: does this need to go by air?” Healy explained. “Like the quality process of five why, you ask
why five times and get to the root cause of why. They had to justify to themselves internally three times why does it need to go by airfreight? “It really is something that is an expectation
now and you must be able to evidence it. Some customers might ask to be given details on the carbon footprint of a particular lane. “There has been much more of a focus within
infrastructure post-
Covid-19, even down to security. A lot of those people left and found other occupations during the pandemic. It continues to be an issue, particularly where
ACW 02 SEPTEMBER 2024
www.aircargoweek.com
the last three to four years and increasingly companies are getting requests from customers asking for the carbon footprint for
the work
being done for them, even to the point of having to justify the price, the service and the carbon footprint impact.”
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