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UPS chooses Shenzhen for new IntraAsia air hub
UPS Also Launches Flights to Third Japanese City
SHENZHEN, China, May 21, 2008 – UPS
(NYSE: UPS)
is moving its intra-Asia air hub from the
Philippines to Shenzhen in China’s thriving Pearl River Delta to improve
customer service by reducing transit times across Asia.
UPS also has added five weekly flights in and out of Nagoya to enhance customer
service to Japan’s Chubu region, a major industrial manufacturing centre. UPS
already flies to Tokyo and Osaka. The new flights offer significant new options
to Chubu industry to reach the rest of Asia and the United States.
UPS will base the new intra-Asia hub at the Shenzhen Airport in southern China,
near Hong Kong. The repositioning will slash at least a day off shipment
times-in-transit for Asian customers while offering a new level of service to
the manufacturing region located just north of Shenzhen. The new cost-efficient
hub will be operational in 2010 and represents an estimated investment of US$180
million.
“Shenzhen’s strategic location will provide
significant advantages, allowing UPS to better serve the growing Asian markets
along these rapidly expanding trade lanes”, said Dan Brutto, president, UPS
International. “For example, we expect a full day’s improvement in transit time
on almost 200 city pairs once this hub opens.
“We want to be where our customers need us most”, Brutto added. “Since we began
flying directly to China in 2001, we have watched this region grow exponentially
not only from a small package perspective but also in heavy air freight”.
Currently, the markets of China, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea and Taiwan account for
more than half of UPS’s total intra-Asia volume. Of this, a sizeable proportion
of Asia package export volume now originates in southeast China and Hong Kong.
“Given the growth in shipping along the southern rim of China, it now makes more
sense to sort and dispatch this volume from a hub closer to our customers”,
explained Brutto. “And in making the switch, because of the growth we’re seeing,
we intend to build a new sorting hub in Shenzhen with five times the capacity of
the existing hub. UPS is very grateful to the Shenzhen government and Shenzhen
Airport Authority for their strong support of our expansion and we look forward
to a successful partnership”.
Since taking direct control of its international express operations inside China
in 2005, UPS has made significant investments in the country. In 2007, UPS
signed an agreement with the Shanghai Airport Group to establish a UPS
International Air Hub at Pudong International Airport in Shanghai. When it opens
in November, the Shanghai hub will connect China to the UPS global air network,
including U.S. and European destinations. It thus will play a substantially
different role than the hub in Shenzhen, which will connect all major Asian
points.
The Shenzhen hub, expected to total about 89,000 square metres in size (almost 1
million square feet), will include an express customs handling unit, sorting
facilities, cargo handling and cargo build-up areas and ramp handling operations.
It will be capable initially of processing up to 18,000 pieces per hour --
compared to the existing 7,500 pieces per hour in the Philippines – but can be
easily expanded to a capacity of 36,000 pieces per hour. It will employ about
400 people.
UPS long has pursued a multi-hub strategy to ensure the highest levels of air
service in Asia with existing facilities in the Philippines, Taiwan, Hong Kong
and Singapore. The hub in the Philippines, located in Pampanga at the former
Clark Air Force Base, opened in 2002 and became the site for a large sorting
facility to handle packages destined for other points in Asia. The other three
hubs generally handle volume moving in or out of Asia to North America and
Europe.
The existing facility at Clark will continue to be a strategic location for
UPS’s multi-hub network in Asia. In addition to Clark’s role as the main import
and export gateway for the Philippines, UPS also is exploring placing
alternative operations there. As an employer that values its employees and with
a strong tradition of promoting from within the company, UPS is identifying
alternative employment opportunities within the UPS network for those who will
be affected by the transition.
The new flights to Japan are the result of a U.S.-Japan aviation agreement
signed in September 2007, which granted UPS the authority to operate daily
flights between the U.S. and Nagoya in addition to its daily services to Tokyo
and Osaka. UPS will operate five weekly MD-11 flights from Anchorage through
Nagoya’s Central Japan International Airport before heading to Shanghai in
China.
“The start of UPS flights to Nagoya will allow
UPS to gain an even stronger foothold in Japan and increase transportation
options for the various industries in Chubu”, said Brutto. “With our diverse
product portfolio and worldwide network, UPS is well-positioned to support
Japanese businesses interested in trading in global markets”.
Most recently in Japan, UPS expanded its facility in Shinkiba in central Tokyo
to provide improved services to customers seeking integrated logistics solutions.
Streamlined brokerage and bonded logistics services at the Shinkiba hub
increased operational efficiency and improved customer service by shortening
delivery times.
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