Agreements Technology

Passenger to Freighter conversions demands on rise, new partnerships soar

The center will start its first business with three Ethiopian Airlines owned B767-300 aircraft.
The new passenger-to-freighter conversion center will provide solutions for the rising demand for cargo aircraft of B767 models

Ethiopian to partner with Israel Aerospace Industries for a dedicated cargo conversion center in Addis Ababa Airport

20 August 2021: Ethiopian Airlines Group have partnered with IAI to build a cargo conversion center in MRO facilities in Addis Ababa Airport. The center will start its first business with three Ethiopian Airlines owned B767-300 aircraft. It will soon expand its services to all airlines in African and wider region.

Ethiopian Airlines Group Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Tewolde Gebre Mariam said, ‘’In line with our Diversified Aviation Business Model of Vision 2025, we have been increasing our cargo capacity in fleet, ground service infrastructure and cargo connectivity network. We are very happy that we are able to collaborate with IAI to enable us to expand our cargo and logistics services which is already the largest and leading cargo network in Africa. The capacity building will also help us expand our MRO services with cutting edge technology and knowledge transfer.”

Yossi Melamed, IAI’s Executive VP and General Manager of Aviation Group said, “We are witnessing a sharp rise in the demand for cargo aircraft as a result of the rise in e- commerce, which has peaked to record levels during the COVID-19 pandemic. IAI has an excellent reputation as a conversion center of passenger-to-freighters aircraft, and we are constantly receiving requests to open such conversion centers in more and more locations around the world. I am excited by the opening of the current center in Ethiopia and thank my colleagues in Ethiopian Airlines for the trust they have put in IAI’s Aviation Group, as the world’s leader in conversions.

The new passenger-to-freighter conversion center, which will operate from the Ethiopian MRO center in Addis Ababa, will provide solutions for the rising demand for cargo aircraft of B767 models. The conversion line in Ethiopia will join existing conversion sites IAI operates at its campus in Ben Gurion International Airport and in Mexico. It is to be recalled that Ethiopian MRO, with its internal capacity, temporarily converted 25 of its passenger aircraft to freighter to boost its cargo capacity as demand to transport emergency medical supplies soared.