
Amazon Makes First Direct Aircraft Purchases
Eleven more Boeing 767-300 freighters will join the company’s transportation network.
Amazon has bought seven Boeing 767-300s from Delta Air Lines and four from Canada’s WestJet as it moves to expand its air transport network to meet surging demand during the COVID-19 crisis and beyond. The deals mark the online retailer’s first direct aircraft purchases. The four WestJet aircraft, now undergoing passenger-to-cargo conversion, will join Amazon’s network this year and the Delta jets will begin flying freight for the online retailer in 2022, the company added. All will fly for third-party carriers.
Last year Amazon launched its first-ever air hub at Leipzig/Halle Airport in Germany and new regional air operations at 11 other airports, including New York JFK and Chicago O’Hare.
Amazon launched its air transport subsidiary as a means to circumvent and compete against freight giants such as UPS and FedEx Express in 2016, when it signed a seven-year lease deal covering 20 Boeing 767s with Delaware-based air cargo service provider ATSG. Company subsidiaries ABX Air, a Part 121 cargo airline, and charter carrier Air Transport International, operate the airplanes for Amazon. That same year Atlas Air Worldwide signed a deal with Amazon to fly 20 Boeing 767-300s for the online retailer under a 10-year lease deal that grants Amazon rights to acquire as much as 30 percent of the cargo carrier.
Amazon’s contract carriers now fly a total of 66 airplanes, including 22 Boeing 737-800BCFs.