KEY POINTS
  • Flight restrictions and more expensive fuel resulting from Russia's Ukraine invasion are driving up airfreight prices.
  • It could mean even costlier goods for consumers, who are already grappling with high inflation.
  • Cargo and passenger airlines have rerouted planes around Russian and Ukrainian airspace or canceled flights altogether.
A Boeing 747-8F operated by AirBridgeCargo takes off from Leipzig/Halle Airport.

The cost of transporting goods by air has surged since Russia's invasion of Ukraine last week, just as consumers are already grappling with the fastest pace of inflation in nearly 40 years.

Carriers, including KLM Royal Dutch Airlines and United Parcel Service, are filling their planes with pricier fuel for longer Asia routes to avoid Russia due to airspace closures. Jet fuel prices in the United States this week hit the highest in more than a decade.