Maersk & Cargo iQ Clash Over Purchase of Air Freight Capacity

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  • Cargo iQ denied suggestions to processes help shippers cut out forwarders to deal directly with carriers.
  • Maersk plans to cut out ‘the middleman’ and become an ‘end-to-end solutions provider’.
  • Cargo airlines intend to move closer to shippers and to avoid using intermediaries.
  • The first step in the process is an online booking and increasing the percent of direct booking.
  • Carriers are pushing direct shipper–carrier bookings up to 15-20% (from less than 5%).

According to an article published in The Loadstar and authored by Alex Lennane, Cargo iQ, an interest group for quality standards in air freight, has denied suggestions that its processes help shippers cut out forwarders to deal directly with carriers.

Airlines come closer to ships

A blog post published by Maersk Growth, the shipping group’s corporate venture arm, predicts airlines are expected to move closer to the shipper – one of the more controversial statements in the air freight sector.

Maersk is itself well on the way to cutting out ‘the middleman’ and becoming an ‘end-to-end solutions provider’, although it also has a forwarding arm in Damco. It says air carriers have a desire to reduce layers of involved middlemen.

Cargo airlines intend to move closer to shippers and to avoid using intermediaries such as forwarders, at least for parts of their business. (The Cargo IQ initiative is a good indicator of this trend)”.

Increasing the percentage of direct booking

It adds that the first step in the process is an online booking and increasing the percentage of direct booking.

Some expect that carriers will increasingly be able to completely disintermediate forwarders, pushing direct shipper–carrier bookings up to 15-20% (from less than 5% today).

However, very few air freight booking platforms allow shippers to book directly, and carriers have insisted for years that they cannot manage without an intermediary.

Ariaen Zimmerman, chief of Cargo iQ, told The Loadstar this reading of the market misunderstood the realities of the situation.

Biggest problems of shippers

He added: One of the biggest problems is that it is not easy for shippers to buy clearly defined carrier products and have a clear view of their shipments’ progress, and Cargo iQ does add value in the transparency chain. So there is value for the shipper in our proposition. But it does not cut out the forwarder.

He explained: We also create transparency for the ground handler’s processes – but that doesn’t mean the carrier would be cut out. All the participants have a role, and the forwarder’s role is to ensure sufficient access to the right capacity for the shipper. Carriers can’t do that, it’s too complex to do in every market. It shows a lack of understanding of what the forwarder does. Cutting anyone from the logistics chain is not the answer. Yes, the roles of all participants may have to be reinvented every day as the market develops, and yes, we add value for shippers using air freight.

Aim to raise quality in the sector

He added that Cargo iQ had many forwarder members, whose aim, like the other participants, was to raise quality in the sector.

There are other parts of the Maersk article, he said, that was more accurate, such as the statement thatthere is a lot of room for improvement.

It also notes that the market is beset with favoritism: Giving all power to regional stakeholders bears the inherent risk of favoritism, which creates unnecessary barriers of entry for new players and irrational preferential treatment of a few players — as a forwarder you must be ‘in the club’ of an airline to get capacity.

It also cites high transaction costs, owing to inefficient booking processes and the untapped potential of technology to increase utilization.

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Source: The Loadstar