Singapore Airlines Cargo

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Singapore Airlines Cargo
IATA
SQ
ICAO
SQC
Callsign
SINCARGO
Founded 2001
Hubs Singapore Changi Airport
Sharjah International Airport
Brussels Airport
Alliance WOW Alliance
Fleet size 14
Destinations 36
Parent company Singapore Airlines Limited
Headquarters Singapore
Key people Chew Choon Seng (CEO)
Website: http://www.siacargo.com

Singapore Airlines Cargo (SIA Cargo) is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Singapore Airlines and was formed in 2001. SIA Cargo is the world's third-largest cargo airline in terms of international freight tonne kilometres (FTK) [1]. It has a dedicated flight network spanning 36 cities in 18 countries,[2][3][4][5][6][7] managing an 8-billion-tonne-kilometre capacity through a fleet of 14 all-cargo aircraft and the cargo holds of 96 passenger aircraft operated by Singapore Airlines.[8]

The airline is part of the WOW Alliance, which also includes Lufthansa Cargo, SAS Cargo Group, and JAL Cargo as members. The airline owns a 25% stake in Great Wall Airlines, a new cargo airline based in Shanghai. Great Wall Airlines leased two Boeing 747-412F from SIA Cargo to operate its first route from Shanghai's Pudong Airport to Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport.

Contents

[edit] History

Singapore Airlines Cargo was incorporated in 1 July 2001, taking over the air-freight operations of Singapore Airlines as a separate subsidiary. SIA Cargo leased the entire freighter fleet from Singapore Airlines, as well as taking over management of the cargo holds in all of Singapore Airlines' passenger aircraft. Within a few months, it entered an alliance with Lufthansa Cargo and SAS Cargo Group to form WOW Alliance on 1 October 2001.[9] Japan Airlines Cargo joined the alliance later on 5 July 2002.[10]

Singapore Airlines Boeing 707-338C freighter (9V-BFN) at Zurich Airport in 1979. The aircraft was delivered on 20 November 1972, and was SIA's ninth Boeing 707 aircraft.
Singapore Airlines Boeing 707-338C freighter (9V-BFN) at Zurich Airport in 1979. The aircraft was delivered on 20 November 1972, and was SIA's ninth Boeing 707 aircraft.

Securerider, a premium product for secured shipments was launched on 7 January 2002,[11] including services such as Swiftrider, Timerider and Coolrider targeting general shipments, heavy shipments, and temperature-sensitive cargo, respectively.

The airline garnered its first award as an all-cargo airline by winning the "Best Global Air Cargo Carrier" and "Best Air Cargo Carrier - Asia" at the Asian Freight Industry Awards (AFIA) in 2002, an award which parent company Singapore Airlines had already won eight times consecutively.[12] It was named as the "Best Airfreight Carrier" in the inaugural Hong Kong-based Asia Logistics Awards in the same year.[13]

New routes were introduced in the next few years as the airline began to take advantage of liberalised aviation agreements. A round-the-world service was introduced on 31 October 2001, flying from Singapore to Hong Kong, Dallas, Chicago, Brussels, Sharjah, and back to Singapore on Wednesdays, and on the Singapore, Hong Kong, Dallas, Chicago, Brussels, Mumbai, Singapore route on Fridays.[14] It became the first third-country freighter airline to fly direct between China and the United States on 22 May 2003 when flights commenced from Singapore to Xiamen, Nanjing and onwards to Chicago. Return flights are operated from Chicago and Los Angeles to Nanjing.[15]

In March 2004, a weekly New York City-Brussels-Kuwait-Colombo-Singapore routing was introduced.[16]

[edit] Destinations

Singapore Airlines Cargo Boeing 747, dubbed the MegaArk, (9V-SFJ) on  approach to London Heathrow Airport
Singapore Airlines Cargo Boeing 747, dubbed the MegaArk, (9V-SFJ) on approach to London Heathrow Airport

Singapore Airlines Cargo operates dedicated cargo flights to 36 destinations in 18 countries, of which 25 are served by both Singapore Airlines passenger aircraft and SIA Cargo aircraft. The airline also has scheduled cargo flights to 12 destinations, which do not receive service from Singapore Airlines passenger aircraft, namely: Nairobi, Tianjin, Xiamen, Macau, Glasgow, Kuwait City, Sharjah, Brussels, Anchorage, Chicago and Dallas. Sharjah and Brussels serve as hubs for the Middle Eastern and European regions respectively.

Additionally, as SIA Cargo manages the cargo holds of all Singapore Airlines passenger aircraft, the company offers cargo product services to all destinations on the Singapore Airlines passenger network.

[edit] Fleet

See also: Singapore Airlines fleet
Loading a Singapore Airlines Cargo Boeing 747 from the front at Copenhagen Airport
Loading a Singapore Airlines Cargo Boeing 747 from the front at Copenhagen Airport

When incorporated in 2001, all nine Singapore Airlines' Boeing 747 MegaArk freighters were transferred to the new cargo start-up at market value, and henceforth, all new freighter purchases were to be made from the new company's books. All cargo-hold spaces in the Singapore Airlines' passenger planes are also managed by the new company.

SIA Cargo currently operates 14 Boeing 747-400F MegaArk freighters. The Boeing 747-400 MegaArk freighter, with a 110-tonne payload and 8,245 km range, can carry more payloads further than any other commercial cargo aircraft, and feature typical capabilities such as front loading from the nose, temperature control and pressure-regulation systems. The average age of the freighter fleet was 6 years 5 months as at 31 March 2008 [17].

In addition, the company manages the cargo holds of 100 passenger aircraft operated by Singapore Airlines. These offer 9-23 tonnes of cargo capacity per plane depending on aircraft type.[8]

Singapore Airlines Cargo fleet
Aircraft In fleet Order Option Engine Notes
Boeing 747-412F 14 0 0 Pratt & Whitney PW4056 9V-SFA - 9V-SFB, 9V-SFD,
9V-SFF - 9V-SFG, 9V-SFI - 9V-SFQ
Total 14 0 0    

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Cargo Rankings 2006" (November 2008). Airline Business. 
  2. ^ Cargo Quick Reference Timetable - South-East Asian. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  3. ^ Cargo Quick Reference Timetable - North American. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  4. ^ Cargo Quick Reference Timetable - North Asian. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  5. ^ Cargo Quick Reference Timetable - South-West Pacific. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  6. ^ Cargo Quick Reference Timetable - European. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  7. ^ Cargo Quick Reference Timetable - West Asian & African. Retrieved on 2007-05-11.
  8. ^ a b Singapore Airlines Cargo Fleet. Singapore Airlines Cargo.
  9. ^ Singapore Airlines Cargo (26 September 2001). "Lufthansa Cargo, SAS Cargo and Singapore Airlines Cargo - Alliance Enters the Market". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-05-10.
  10. ^ Singapore Airlines Cargo (5 July 2002). "New Partner for WOW: Japan Airlines Cargo Joins Lufthansa Cargo, SAS Cargo and Singapore Airlines Cargo in Air Cargo Alliance". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-05-10.
  11. ^ Singapore Airlines Cargo (7 January 2002). "Singapore Airlines Cargo Launches Securerider". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-05-10.
  12. ^ Singapore Airlines Cargo (14 March 2002). "Singapore Airlines Cargo Wins Again At Asian Freight Industry Award". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-05-10.
  13. ^ Singapore Airlines Cargo (29 November 2002). "Singapore Airlines Cargo Wins Top Logistics Award". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-05-10.
  14. ^ Singapore Airlines Cargo (31 October 2001). "DFW Welcome Singapore Airlines Cargo". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-05-10.
  15. ^ Singapore Airlines Cargo (22 May 2003). "Singapore Airlines Cargo Commences Direct China-US services". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-05-10.
  16. ^ Singapore Airlines Cargo (15 March 2004). "SIA Cargo Expands Freighter Fleet and Service Network". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-05-10.
  17. ^ Annual Report 07/08. Retrieved on 2008-05-18.

[edit] External links


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