Cargo Facts

No products in the cart.

SUBSCRIBE
  • NEWS
  • AI TOOL
  • INSIGHTS DATA
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • FEATURES
  • LIVE EVENTS
  • VIRTUAL EVENTS
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
    • Webinar Library
  • PODCAST
  • CONSULTING
Thursday, July 16, 2026
Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Freighter Transactions
  • Capacity & Demand
  • Conversions
  • Carriers
  • Routes
  • AAM
  • The Future
  • Cybersecurity
Cargo Facts
  • NEWS
  • AI TOOL
  • INSIGHTS DATA
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • FEATURES
  • LIVE EVENTS
  • VIRTUAL EVENTS
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
    • Webinar Library
  • PODCAST
  • CONSULTING
Log In
No Result
View All Result
Cargo Facts
No Result
View All Result

Yogurt culture grows

Cargo Facts StaffbyCargo Facts Staff
March 17, 2014
in Technology
0
Share on FacebookShare on LinkedIn
CFI-big.jpg

Consumers worldwide are looking for healthier food options, says Chris Connell, president of Commodity Forwarders Inc. (CFI).

The perishables freight forwarder is seeing additional foods being transported by air. Most food CFI ships comes from the U.S.

“From our fresh fruit and veg business, we’re seeing a lot more different types of commodities going airborne, but we’re also seeing items like our protein business – which is yogurt and meat and cheeses – continuing into different markets as well,” Connell says. “We might see a volume drop in one commodity, but we’re seeing additional commodities to create diversification within the subgroup. That’s allowing us as an overall company to see more exports.”

CFI has been flying more yogurts in the last year than just four years ago.

“People like to eat better, feel healthier and we’re seeing that growth surprisingly continue in the non-pharma perishable marketplace,” he says.

CFI usually ships yogurt by air for new product rollouts. Some yogurts also have a shorter shelf life that requires airfreight to be in the mix for either the finished product or its ingredients.

For new product rollouts, companies don’t necessarily maintain big inventories in non-U.S. countries, so more of a just-in-time system is in place.

“As that brand or commodity gets acceptance, then they eventually start rolling it to inventories,” he says.

Eventually, the long-term supply chain will push those yogurts to oceanfreight, Connell says.

“When you move a huge amount of commodity inventory, money’s stuck in inventory,” he says. “We did see during the fiscal crisis some of that pushed to airfreight because people were still eating, but they didn’t want their money tied up on the vessels.”

CFI’s protein air cargo business is growing in the Middle East, the UK and Asia.

Some of this is likely driven by the food scares in China and other parts of the world, he says. The scares have some high-end retailers looking into a more secure source of food quality, which Connell says has probably contributed to the rise in CFI’s protein business in the last year.

“At the end of the day, the U.S. is a high-quality food supplier,” he says. “And when there is insecurity on where your food comes from in the supply chain in certain countries from time to time, the U.S. tends to be able to pick up the slack as a sort of assurance policy because we have some very positive brands within the U.S. that translates well to keeping the consumers a bit more secure in their choice.”

In 2014, CFI is focusing on continued investment in its IT and cool chain infrastructures, adding new coolers to its Seattle operation by the end of March.

E-freight is also on the table.

“There’s a lot of push on how we’re transferring information to and from the airlines, so our goal is to continue to handle more transactions via an e-cargo environment,” Connell says, “but not just do that to our airline vendors but how do we also then get information from our customers to help reduce the manpower.”

CFI is marking its 40th anniversary this year. The company started in 1974 shipping strawberries from California to Germany.

Tags: cold chain/cool chainfood
Previous Post

N402UP – the First 757-200PF to Fly

Next Post

Air freight demand continues positive in February

Related Posts

Hong Kong International Airport freighters
Technology

Cyber Aviation Global Forum to explore advancing cybersecurity risks in aviation

April 10, 2026
Fraunhofer IML robot
Technology

Fraunhofer looks to bring autonomous tech to air cargo

March 20, 2026
IATA WCS 2026 Data
Technology

More data scientists needed for increasingly digital industry

March 12, 2026
Next Post
Pudong Cargo Terminal

Air freight demand continues positive in February

Please login to join discussion

Cargo Facts Free Newsletters

Cargo Facts Connect Podcast

  • About Us
  • Help Center
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy & Usage Terms
  • ADA Compliance
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • The Dahl Scholarship

 [wt_cli_manage_consent]

Follow Us

twitter linkedin podcast podcast podcast
© 2026 Royal Media
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Freighter Transactions
    • Capacity & Demand
    • Conversions
    • Carriers
    • Routes
    • AAM
    • The Future
  • Insights Data
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • AI Tool
  • Features
  • Live Events
  • Virtual Events
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
  • Podcast
  • Consulting
  • Subscribe
  • Log In / Account

© 2022 Royal Media & Cargo Facts

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Freighter Transactions
    • Capacity & Demand
    • Conversions
    • Carriers
    • Routes
    • AAM
    • The Future
  • Insights Data
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • AI Tool
  • Features
  • Live Events
  • Virtual Events
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
  • Podcast
  • Consulting
  • Subscribe
  • Log In / Account

© 2022 Royal Media & Cargo Facts