The air logistics corridor between Asia and Europe received a significant capacity boost. Air France-KLM Martinair Cargo (AFKLMP Cargo) has officially announced the launch of a new dedicated Boeing 747-400 freighter service connecting Amsterdam Airport Schiphol (AMS) and Seoul–Incheon International Airport (ICN).
The service is scheduled to commence on March 30, 2026, at the start of the Summer 2026 season. This move marks a strategic return for the group to the South Korean “main deck” cargo market, addressing a critical shortage of specialized freighter space in Northeast Asia.
Route Details & Capacity Expansion
The new service is designed to integrate seamlessly into the airline’s existing high-demand Asian network.
Frequency: The service will operate three times per week.
Rotation: The flights are structured as an AMS–ICN–HKG–AMS rotation, linking two of Asia’s most vital tech hubs—Seoul and Hong Kong—directly back to Amsterdam.
Payload: Utilizing the Boeing 747-400ERF (Extended Range Freighter), each flight offers a substantial payload of up to 112 tonnes. This effectively adds over 300 tonnes of weekly main-deck capacity to the route.
Technical Advantage: The 747-400F is uniquely suited for this route due to its nose-loading capability, allowing for the transport of outsized cargo that cannot fit into standard belly-hold compartments.
Strategic Drivers: Semiconductors and E-Commerce
The launch is a direct response to structural shifts in the 2026 global economy:
The AI Semiconductor Boom: South Korea’s export of semiconductors and high-performance computing equipment has reached record levels in early 2026. These high-value, time-sensitive components require the specialized handling and security that only dedicated freighters can provide.
E-Commerce “Base Load”: Cross-border e-commerce now accounts for roughly 20% of global air cargo. Despite new EU customs regulations, such as the flat €3 duty on low-value consignments, the demand for expedited delivery from Asian marketplaces to European consumers remains a “structural base load” for carriers.
Supply Chain Reconfiguration: As global trade faces new 15% tariffs in other regions, the Asia-Europe lane is seeing a “front-loading” of volumes as businesses secure inventory ahead of potential policy shifts.






