“With a diverse geography and large population it is crucial that the available belly capacity is used effectively to enhance trade within and to and from India,” says Glyn Hughes, Director General, TIACA. “This is certainly the situation today with cargo benefitting from and supporting extensive passenger operations. However belly capacity alone will not provide the full capacity needed to achieve India’s economic growth targets. So freighter networks are crucial for connecting to global high volume cargo hubs as well as to provide much needed cargo capacity on developing passenger routes.
Narrow body passenger aircraft such as the B737 or A321 may offer between 1 and 4 tonnes of cargo capacity on the lower deck, depending on aircraft version, flight route, passenger load factor and the nature of cargo. With 1 to 1.5 t being the norm.
Mid-sized passenger aircraft such as the B757 may offer between 2 and 8 tonnes of cargo capacity on the lower deck, depending on aircraft version, flight route, passenger load factor and the nature of cargo.
Wide bodied passenger aircraft such as the A330, A350, B777, B787 also vary depending on passenger load factors, wind direction, route, flight duration and type of cargo carried. But a A330 could be between 10 and 12 tonnes, an A350 could be around 17 tonnes but up to 25 tonnes in the -1000 variant, a B787 could be around 14 tonnes and a B777 between 20 and 25 tonnes depending on variant.“