MAERSK Air Cargo is to launch a new trial service between the UK and China to help meet peak season demand, reports London's Air Cargo News.
The airline will operate the weekly service between Bournemouth Airport and Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport (HGH) in Zhejiang province utilising a Boeing 767-300 freighter with a capacity of around 45 tonnes.
Cargo will be handled in Bournemouth by the airport's in-house business, Cargo First.
The service will initially operate until the end of the year to cater for peak season demand, but there is the potential to continue after.
The additional service comes as the airline has been ramping up operations since its launch earlier this year when it launched flights from its home hub of Billund in Denmark to Hangzhou.
In April, the carrier added flights from Hangzhou to Chicago Rockford.
Gary Jeffreys, managing director of maersk Area UK & Ireland, said: 'This represents our integrator strategy and demonstrates our product offering and capabilities across all modes of transport. Whether it be time critical, capacity challenges or product launches we have the capabilities to meet our customers' demands.'
Steve Gill, managing director of Bournemouth Airport, added: 'We're delighted that Maersk has chosen Bournemouth for this new route as we grow our ambition to become the UK's number one entry and exit point for time critical cargo.
'We now have 500 tonnes of weekly import capacity operating between China and Bournemouth as more customers take advantage of our location, lack of slot constraints and 'One Team' integrated approach across all airport and cargo handling operations.'
The airport has based its strategy on a faster cargo processing time than its busier rivals such as Heathrow.
The airport claims that research shows that deliveries via Bournemouth to London warehouses could halve the time of delivery to the same end destinations compared with using a London hub airport.
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The airline will operate the weekly service between Bournemouth Airport and Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport (HGH) in Zhejiang province utilising a Boeing 767-300 freighter with a capacity of around 45 tonnes.
Cargo will be handled in Bournemouth by the airport's in-house business, Cargo First.
The service will initially operate until the end of the year to cater for peak season demand, but there is the potential to continue after.
The additional service comes as the airline has been ramping up operations since its launch earlier this year when it launched flights from its home hub of Billund in Denmark to Hangzhou.
In April, the carrier added flights from Hangzhou to Chicago Rockford.
Gary Jeffreys, managing director of maersk Area UK & Ireland, said: 'This represents our integrator strategy and demonstrates our product offering and capabilities across all modes of transport. Whether it be time critical, capacity challenges or product launches we have the capabilities to meet our customers' demands.'
Steve Gill, managing director of Bournemouth Airport, added: 'We're delighted that Maersk has chosen Bournemouth for this new route as we grow our ambition to become the UK's number one entry and exit point for time critical cargo.
'We now have 500 tonnes of weekly import capacity operating between China and Bournemouth as more customers take advantage of our location, lack of slot constraints and 'One Team' integrated approach across all airport and cargo handling operations.'
The airport has based its strategy on a faster cargo processing time than its busier rivals such as Heathrow.
The airport claims that research shows that deliveries via Bournemouth to London warehouses could halve the time of delivery to the same end destinations compared with using a London hub airport.
SeaNews Turkey