Flood of small parcels from China pushes Belgian airport’s capacity to limit
Liege Airport in Belgium is experiencing a significant strain on its capacity due to a surge in small parcel shipments from China. Since the start of the year, over 4 million such parcels have arrived daily, overwhelming the 80-member Belgian customs inspection team.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedLiege Airport in Belgium is experiencing a significant strain on its capacity due to a surge in small parcel shipments from China. Since the start of the year, over 4 million such parcels have arrived daily, overwhelming the 80-member Belgian customs inspection team. The airport, designed partly to serve e-commerce giants like Amazon and Shein, is struggling with this "explosion" of goods. This increase is attributed to a shift in shipping routes following a US executive order last year that removed the duty-free exemption for Chinese packages under $800 entering the United States. The influx is pushing the airport's infrastructure and personnel to their limits.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedAn executive order signed by Trump on February 1 last year removed the “de minimis” exemption for Chinese packages.
The airport was built, in part, to cater to e-commerce platforms such as Amazon, Shein, Temu and Alibaba.
The Belgian customs inspection team at the airport has only 80 members.
More than 4 million small parcels from China arrive at Liege airport every day since the beginning of the year.
The 'explosion' in small parcels from China is pushing the airport's capacity to its limit.