The AIFA gets serious: high-level supervision with companies and diplomats
The Felipe Ángeles International Airport received a supervision visit that was not just any tour. Air cargo companies, federal authorities and diplomatic representatives met to review how the logistics operation is going and, above all, the coordination in the transportation of goods. The National Customs Agency of Mexico and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs also got involved.
What was reviewed? The Ministry of Infrastructure, Communications and Transportation was clear: the objective was to listen to freight companies, evaluate infrastructure and see how the operating systems are working. They also checked the modernization and technological integration in logistics processes. No wonder: the AIFA already has the capacity to handle large-scale operations, and the authorities assure that customs efficiency has reduced transit times and improved international competitiveness.
“Efficiency in customs processes has allowed us to reduce transit times and improve competitiveness in international trade,” the authorities highlighted.
The heavyweights of the cabinet were there. Roberto Velasco Álvarez, from Foreign Relations, and Jesús Esteva Medina, from Infrastructure, stressed that collaboration between the government and the private sector is key to consolidating the Metropolitan Airport System of the Valley of Mexico. It’s not just an airport; It is a strategic bet.
And the companies responded. Representatives of cargo and courier airlines confirmed that they want to maintain and expand operations in the AIFA. They recognized its connectivity and logistical conditions, and promised to continue investing in infrastructure within the complex to move goods nationally and internationally. This is not a game: AIFA is positioning itself as a real logistics center.




