Try GOLD - Free
MIDDLE EAST CARGO VILLAGES: SILENT ECONOMIC POWERHOUSES
Cruising Heights
|November 2025
Dubai's Cargo Village owes its dominance to both its geographic position—midway between Asia, Europe, and Africa, letting half the world's population be reached in eight hours—and its sophisticated logistics strategy, integrating air, sea, and road networks with rapid turnaround times and advanced bonded facilities. Over the years, it evolved into a bustling hub of logistics companies, freight forwarders, and global carriers, setting new standards in speed and connectivity for Middle East trade.
In the early 1990s, when most airports and airlines in the Middle East were still focused on moving passengers, Dubai quietly set in motion a logistics revolution that has gone to given the region major dividends. The foresight of the Middle Easterners to capitalise on its geographical location, ideally located on the East-West axis, is a case study in itself.
• Dubai Cargo Village pioneers logistics transformation on the East-West axis.
• DCV model gets replicated across the Gulf.
Saudi Arabia is one of the fastest-growing e-commerce regions.
In May 1991, the Dubai Cargo Village (DCV) opened its doors beside the Dubai International Airport with a modest investment of about $75 million, with four aircraft bays and a designed capacity of 250,000 tonnes a year. Few could have imagined that within just three years, it would be bursting at the seams. By the mid-1990s, the village was handling well over 350,000 tonnes annually, forcing immediate expansion. That was the first sign of what was to come: a logistics transformation that would position the Gulf as one of the world's great air-cargo crossroads.
By 2007, DCV and its expanded facilities were processing 1.66 million tonnes of freight a year, with throughput growing at nearly 15 per cent annually. This writer was editing the newsletter of Dubai Cargo Village between 2007 and 2010, a period which was hit by recession, but DCV managed to stay afloat, thanks to the then Vice President of Cargo, Dubai Airports, Ali Al Jallaf, who steered DCV. In 2008, DCV handled 1.8 million tons of cargo, and 25,279 cargo aircraft, and Airports Council International ranked it as the world's 8th busiest air cargo terminal. As it grew, DCV was renamed Dubai International Airport Cargo Gateway.
This story is from the November 2025 edition of Cruising Heights.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Cruising Heights
Cruising Heights
BOEING 787'S RAT CONUNDRUM
It began as a smooth descent over Birmingham and ended with an unexpected jolt of uncertainty. When the Boeing 787's emergency power turbine sprang open uncommanded, it set off a chain of global questions about engineering discipline, regulatory vigilance, and the fine line between innovation and vulnerability.
7 mins
November 2025
Cruising Heights
MIDDLE EAST CARGO VILLAGES: SILENT ECONOMIC POWERHOUSES
Dubai's Cargo Village owes its dominance to both its geographic position—midway between Asia, Europe, and Africa, letting half the world's population be reached in eight hours—and its sophisticated logistics strategy, integrating air, sea, and road networks with rapid turnaround times and advanced bonded facilities. Over the years, it evolved into a bustling hub of logistics companies, freight forwarders, and global carriers, setting new standards in speed and connectivity for Middle East trade.
9 mins
November 2025
Cruising Heights
QANTAS 'SUNRISE' TAKES FORM IN TOULOUSE
The race to conquer ultra-long-haul aviation has entered a pivotal phase as Qantas' first Project Sunrise aircraft moves from concept to reality. With engineering milestones now stacking up in Toulouse, the airline is edging closer to redefining global travel and challenging long-standing assumptions about the limits of commercial flight.
8 mins
November 2025
Cruising Heights
ANDHRA PRADESH'S LEAP INTO THE FUTURE OF AVIATION: THE SKY FACTORY AND BEYOND
The state of Andhra Pradesh has embarked on an ambitious journey to position itself at the forefront of India's aviation revolution.
7 mins
November 2025
Cruising Heights
IS ALLIANCE AIR A MILLSTONE AROUND THE GOVERNMENT'S NECK?SUBSIDIARIES DIVESTMENT
When Air India’s sale to the Tata Group marked the end of a long and costly public-sector chapter, one airline remained curiously behind, Alliance Air.
11 mins
November 2025
Cruising Heights
NAVIGATING UNPRECEDENTED TURBULENCE IN 2024-2025
The airline industry's short story of recovery, rapid bounce back from the pandemic, demand outstripping constrained supply, and a bright path back to profitability — now reads more like a complicated novel of competing shocks. In the span of two years, the sector moved from desperate retrenchment to a hopeful rebound; now, in late 2025, the mood is decidedly mixed.
13 mins
November 2025
Cruising Heights
Safety is Non-Negotiable
India's business aviation sector has a relatively low accident rate, but safety concerns persist due to regulatory gaps, pilot fatigue, and ageing aircraft in some fleets. Most incidents are minor, with few fatal accidents in recent years. Business aviation fleet—comprising charter jets, turboprops, and helicopters—has grown rapidly, but its safety record remains under scrutiny. Unlike commercial airlines, business aviation operates under less stringent oversight, which can lead to operational risks.
6 mins
October 2025
Cruising Heights
A BATTLE OVER CABIN BAGGAGE
EU says Spain's airline fines over cabin bag fees breach regulations and has sent a notice to the Spanish government.
1 mins
October 2025
Cruising Heights
DRAGON IN HANGAR
From global safety certification and engine self-reliance to geopolitical headwinds and market trust, COMAC faces daunting hurdles. Will it ultimately emerge as a global aviation brand or remain a regional player?
10 mins
October 2025
Cruising Heights
PERFORMING TO ITS POTENTIAL
Additive manufacturing or 3D printing is delivering on its promise of transforming aero engine design and production.
7 mins
October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

