Things went from bad to worse for airfreight shippers
and forwarders in Hong Kong, as the territory’s government banned more
international routes in response to an increase in Covid-19 cases.
It announced flight bans from eight countries for two
weeks, starting on Saturday, affecting all flights from the US, Canada, the UK,
France, Australia, the Philippines, Pakistan and India.
And, in a separate announcement, the authorities barred
flights from South Korea after three passengers tested positive for the virus
on arrival from Seoul.
In less than six weeks, Hong Kong has imposed flight
bans on 24 routes. The latest affect the likes of Air Canada, Air India
and Philippines AirAsia, but Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific has borne the brunt
of these measures.
When the authorities tightened rules and voided
quarantine-related exemptions for flight crews late last year, management
announced it might be forced to merge passenger and cargo flight schedules, but
after further restrictions on 30 December, the airline announced it was
suspending all longhaul cargo flights – freighters and passenger aircraft
deployed on cargo missions – for seven days.
Director of flight operations Chris Kempis explained
that it was impossible to transition overnight to closed loop operations and
that management needed time to consider all factors, including hotel
availability for quarantined crews.
Cathay has announced the resumption of longhaul
freighter flights, but at a seriously throttled-down level.