PIT Sees Busiest Cargo Year in Nearly 20 Years
Increase is part of long-term plan to provide alternative to congested air hubs
By Bob Kerlik
Published January 24, 2022
Read Time: 4 mins
More cargo passed through Pittsburgh International Airport last year than at any point since 2004, meaning more jobs for the region as the industry capitalized on the airport’s speed and efficiency.
Nearly 250 million pounds of cargo shipped from around the world touched down at PIT in 2021, a 30 percent increase over 2020 and a 26 percent increase from 2019, as demand for air cargo soared amid global supply chain disruptions.
Airport officials and industry experts said PIT’s aggressive cargo strategy – set in motion prior to the pandemic – allowed it to capitalize during the past two years as capacity constraints piled up at major U.S. gateways.
“It’s not just taking advantage of the demand. It’s more than that,” said Nate Hankinson, president of Pittsburgh-based NJH Consulting, which focuses on supply chain and logistics. “PIT has really used that to springboard into a long-term, sustainable product.”
Hankinson said the airport’s success comes from partnering with the regional logistics ecosystem, such as trucking companies, ground handlers, local warehousing, container freight stations and third-party logistics providers.
“The Airport Authority has put a lot of effort into a long-term solution for inbound and outbound air freight – to really build a product that is different than what’s offered at the major air hubs in the U.S. to offer quicker turn times, quicker to market.”
Airlines and logistics companies alike have consistently praised PIT’s ability to speedily unload cargo and get it on trucks to distribution centers, a valuable trait in a business where time quite literally costs money.
Traditional cargo gateways are often swamped, creating a backlog that keeps cargo sitting for days waiting to be processed or available for delivery. Every minute that cargo isn’t being moved to its final destination incurs further expenses.
That fact was echoed by Marc Schlossberg, executive vice president of air cargo & sales/marketing for Unique Logistics. Schlossberg’s company has shipped thousands of pounds of fashion apparel and high-tech products through PIT in the past year on a variety of international airlines, including Cathay Pacific and Qatar Airways.
“What we’re seeing is the labor issues and challenges surrounding lack of capacity at terminals as well as the additional labor required to manage passenger freighters has driven operations to secondary airports like PIT because the major gateways can’t handle the requirements,” Schlossberg said. “The labor shortage is a problem in places like JFK and as a result it’s opened up opportunities for me to divert aircraft away from JFK or Chicago or L.A.”
Conversely, PIT offers no congestion, fast response times and fast turnaround times. Once the cargo arrives it’s trucked “generally to the Midwest and East Coast, however we’ve sent up to Canada and we’ve sent to the West Coast when the congestion’s been bad,” he said. “Nothing gets lost. Once PIT accepts it, we know we’re going to get that service level.”
That growing traffic has a ripple effect throughout the local economy, airport officials said.
“The generation of new jobs that have been created and businesses moving freight through PIT have been a benefit to our region,” said Vince Gastgeb, senior vice president, Corporate & Government Relations. “We are proud to play a part in this economic infrastructure with our cargo growth turning PIT into a reg