Forwarders are providing stability for shippers as tariffs, de minimis reform, and new compliance demands add to supply chain insecurity, Brandon Fried, Executive Director of the Airforwarders Association (AfA), said.
AfA members are helping customers adapt to shifting trade flows and rising costs by keeping freight moving and offering practical solutions in uncertain markets, Fried told members of the Los Angeles Air Cargo Association. Fried pointed to pressures that continue to test supply chains, including cyber risks exposed by the CrowdStrike outage, an increase in extreme weather events, and geopolitical instability from Ukraine, the Red Sea, and the Taiwan Strait.
He added that ageing airport warehouses, truck congestion, and outdated facilities still hold the industry back, underscoring the importance of federal investment in cargo infrastructure.
“Forwarders are the stabilising force when disruption hits,” said Fried.
“We were tested by shocks in 2024, and we adapted. We are ready to protect shippers and keep goods moving through whatever comes next.”
AfA members are also finding opportunity, he said. Reshoring and nearshoring are shifting flows from China toward Southeast Asia and Mexico, while defense logistics and pharmaceuticals continue to deliver steady volumes, while semiconductors are establishing high-value growth corridors.
“Los Angeles is at the center of global trade, and our community depends on forwarders to keep supply chains resilient,” said David Gibson, President, Los Angeles Air Cargo Association.
“As tariffs shift and regulations tighten, AfA members are proving that they are not just adapting, they are leading. Their ability to find solutions in the face of uncertainty is what keeps cargo moving through LAX and beyond.”
Fried said forwarders are applying technology beyond the hype, with Artificial Intelligence (AI) already being used in pricing, Customs automation, and fraud detection, while automation and paperless processes are driving efficiency.
He added that sustainability remains a critical test, with demand for greener supply chains rising faster than the supply of Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF).
“Policy shifts and regulation will continue, but forwarders are the partners who bring resilience, compliance, and solutions,” Fried concluded. “Our members are essential to maintaining confidence in global trade.”
Sustainability will be a key topic at AfA’s AirCargo Conference in Orlando next February, for which registration is now open at airforwarders.org.
The post Airforwarders help shippers navigate tariffs and supply chain disruption appeared first on Air Cargo Week.
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Author: Anastasiya Simsek