Hactl set three new records in one week

Hong Kong Air Cargo Terminals Limited (Hactl) broke three records in the first week of November.
In its SuperTerminal 1 facility, Hactl handled 31,280 tonnes of exports, beating its previous weekly record of 30,593 tonnes in November 2016.
In the same week, its overall total of 42,471 tonnes of cargo handled beat its previous weekly best of 41,926 tonnes, also set in November last year.
 
Meanwhile, on the ramp, Hactl handled a staggering 102 freighters in a single day on 05 November – edging past its previous best of 101 freighters handled in a day, recorded on 23 November last year.
 
Hactl chief executive Mark Whitehead said: “2016 was a year of records for Hactl, largely fuelled by the boom in Q4 resulting from the collapse of Hanjin. We have had no such extraordinary event to boost volumes in 2017, yet our 100 client carriers are all performing strongly and helping us to set new records.
 
“Our work on developing e-commerce export traffic via Hong Kong is clearly playing a part in the overall picture."

 

Hactl set three new records in one week

Hong Kong Air Cargo Terminals Limited (Hactl) broke three records in the first week of November.
In its SuperTerminal 1 facility, Hactl handled 31,280 tonnes of exports, beating its previous weekly record of 30,593 tonnes in November 2016.
In the same week, its overall total of 42,471 tonnes of cargo handled beat its previous weekly best of 41,926 tonnes, also set in November last year.
 
Meanwhile, on the ramp, Hactl handled a staggering 102 freighters in a single day on 05 November – edging past its previous best of 101 freighters handled in a day, recorded on 23 November last year.
 
Hactl chief executive Mark Whitehead said: “2016 was a year of records for Hactl, largely fuelled by the boom in Q4 resulting from the collapse of Hanjin. We have had no such extraordinary event to boost volumes in 2017, yet our 100 client carriers are all performing strongly and helping us to set new records.
 
“Our work on developing e-commerce export traffic via Hong Kong is clearly playing a part in the overall picture."