Mexican cargo operations set to move

Photo: Jaromir Chalabala/ Shutterstock

Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador has confirmed the government has struck an agreement with some airlines to shift cargo operations from Benito Juarez International Airport (Mexico City International Airport) to Felipe Angeles International Airport (AFIA)

On the president’s official website, a press release on February 1 stated that Obrador has reported that flights at AIFA will increase due to the voluntary transfer of airlines.

As a result of this, saturation at Benito Juarez will decrease, said the release.

In a press conference, he indicated that AIFA, which opened in March 2022, is ready to receive cargo flights.

Obrador said cargo operations will be transferred to the new airport in around four months.

DHL will be the first company to move its cargo flights to AFIA, said Obrador. This is due to happen this month.

““The third week of February the first plane will arrive and the managers will come. I will also be there as a recognition of the confidence in the country, in the Ministry of Defense and in the government of the Republic,” Obrador said.

Last month, IATA criticised the government’s plan to ban cargo-only flights from Mexico City’s primary airport, saying airlines should not be expected to move cargo operations at short notice.

This followed local Mexican media reports, which revealed the government’s intention to close Benito Juarez International airport to operators that ”provide national and international scheduled and non-scheduled air transportation services to the public, exclusively for cargo”.

IATA blasts draft ban on cargo-only operations at Mexico’s busiest airport

Share this story

Related Topics

Latest airlines news

Mesa Airlines stops 737F operations for DHL Express

US regional air carrier Mesa Airlines has stopped providing air cargo services for DHL due to a “reduction in cargo…

Read More

Share this story

E-commerce continues to drive up Cathay’s cargo volumes

Cathay Pacific’s year-on-year cargo volumes were up 7.4% in April, once again due to strong e-commerce demand. The airline carried…

Read More

Share this story

Levu Air Cargo scores Latin American first with A321F partnership

Levu Air Cargo will lease an Airbus A321 freighter from SmartLynx Airlines to become the first carrier in Latin America…

Read More

Share this story

Rebecca Jeffrey

Rebecca Jeffrey
New to aviation journalism, I joined Air Cargo News in late 2021 as deputy editor. I previously worked for Mercator Media’s six maritime sector magazines as a reporter, heading up news for Port Strategy. Prior to this, I was editor for Recruitment International (now TALiNT International). Contact me on: [email protected]