Amazon eyes fleet of
85 aircraft as it changes course to buy its own freighters
Amazon is set to
boost its freighter fleet to more than 85 aircraft by the end of next year.
In addition to the
roll-out of a dozen 767-300 freighters leased from ACMI provider ATSG, the
e-commerce giant is bringing in 11 more 767Fs.
But, unlike Amazon’s
traditional leasing approach to building a dedicated air network, the 11
new 767s are outright purchases: four from WestJet and seven from Delta Air
Lines.
The move is no
surprise, though. The writing has been on the wall since last August, when
Amazon registered a 767 freighter in the Federal Aviation Administration’s
database and reserved four more registration numbers for future aircraft.
Sarah Rhoads,
vice-president of Amazon Global Air, said: “Our goal is to continue
delivering for customers across the US in the way that they expect from
Amazon, and purchasing our own aircraft is a natural next step toward that
goal.
“Having a mix of
both leased and owned aircraft in our growing fleet allows us to better
manager our operations, which in turn helps us to keep pace in meeting our
customer promises.”
The emphasis on
serving customers suggests Amazon is not looking to sell capacity on its
freighters to third parties. One senior executive of a freighter airline
commented that the number of planes Amazon was adding should be
accommodating its growing volumes without taking business away from its existing
capacity providers.
And Joseph
Schwieterman, director of the Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan
Development at DePaul University, Chicago, who has been tracking the
e-commerce giant’s air operations, added: “There is no sign that their rate
of growth is easing up. If anything, they’re bulking up to offer next-day
delivery, which is a Herculean task.”
Amazon’s volumes
have been growing at a frantic pace. Its Prime Day in October alone
generated over $10bn in sales, 45% more than the previous year, and it
claims it delivered billions of items over Christmas. This growth is in
stark contrast with the prospect of ongoing capacity shortage. At the same
time, plenty of aircraft are available for conversion as airlines shrink
their fleets, and there is no shortage of furloughed pilots looking for
work.
Economic conditions
and fuel costs are also favourable, Mr Schwieterman noted.
The aircraft
shopping spree is centred on the North American network. Amazon opened a
European hub at Leipzig last year, but for the time being at least
management seems content with leased equipment there and declined to
comment.
In the US, Amazon
has its major hub in Cincinnati due to come on stream in the summer and, in
the spring, a west coast hub in San Bernardino should be ready.
Some observers
regard the $1.5bn Cincinnati facility as a game-changer that may lead to
Amazon’s air operations close to resembling those of FedEx and UPS, but Mr
Schwieterman has doubts.
“I still don’t think
we’ll see a FedEx-style overnight hub,” he said. Amazon has added cities to
its network at a brisk pace, but serves some of these on a periodic basis,
which suggests dynamic scheduling to reposition inventory rather than
scheduled network design.
“It seems algorithms
are driving flights based on needs rather than a FedEx-type schedule,” he
added.
And unlike the
integrators, Amazon does not need flights from all over the US to converge
on a hub during the night. For next-day e-commerce traffic, the company can
operate its flights through the day, he said.
The four 767s from
WestJet will enter service this year and the seven from Delta will follow
in 2022. Amazon will not operate the planes itself but use one or more
undisclosed CMI operators. Traditionally it has relied on Atlas Air and
ATSG, but there are doubts that they will be chosen.
There are rumours
that the fractious relationship of Atlas Air with its pilots’ union has
soured Amazon’s enthusiasm for expanding with the leasing firm. The e-commerce
behemoth raised eyebrows at the end of 2019 when it picked Sun Country
Airlines, a small passenger operator, to run a fleet of 10 737 freighters
for it. At the time, Atlas parent Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings and the
union were locked in a bitter court dispute.
And Amazon may
spring an even bigger surprise than the aircraft purchases when it
announces the designated operator(s) of its own 767 freighters.
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