Air-freighting solar kits to the Middle East: a procurement checklist
UN38.3, IATA dangerous-goods declarations, packaging dimensions and the carrier choices that determine whether your humanitarian solar kit lands in three days or three weeks.
Humanitarian and emergency-response procurement teams routinely need solar power kits in the field within days, not weeks. Sea-freight is too slow; LCL pallet booking adds a week of port delay; the only realistic option is air-freight. This guide walks through what humanitarian procurement teams should check before placing an order to ensure smooth air-freight clearance.
1. Verify UN38.3 certification
Lithium battery air-freight requires UN38.3 testing certification: 8 tests covering altitude, thermal, vibration, shock, short-circuit, impact, overcharge and forced discharge. NURION supplies the UN38.3 test summary report with every Sirius shipment. Without it, the carrier will refuse the shipment regardless of size.
2. Choose the right packaging tier
Lithium batteries are restricted as Class 9 dangerous goods, with packaging tiered by Wh content:
- **< 100 Wh per cell, < 2 packs per shipment** — exempt (e.g. consumer power bank)
- **< 100 Wh per cell, > 2 packs** — Section II packaging (most NURION small accessories)
- **100–300 Wh** — Section IB (Sirius 1K falls here for some carrier classifications)
- **> 300 Wh per pack** — Section IA, full DG declaration (Sirius 2K and 3K)
3. Carrier choice
Not every carrier accepts every packaging tier. The reliable air-freight carriers for Section IA lithium battery to Middle East destinations include:
- **Cargolux** (Luxembourg hub, freighter network — strongest)
- **Etihad Cargo** (UAE direct)
- **Qatar Airways Cargo** (Doha hub)
- **DHL DG Express** (door-to-door, ex Hong Kong / Shenzhen — best for small humanitarian shipments)
NURION can pre-book any of the above on the buyer's behalf for project shipments.
4. Solar panels — IATA Section IIIB
Solar panels are not dangerous goods. The Nuria 60 W and 120 W ship as standard parcel air-freight (IATA general cargo). The 200 W is oversize parcel — still air-freight friendly but watch the carrier's max-dimension rules.
5. Documentation pack required at airport
Per shipment:
- UN38.3 test summary report (per battery pack model)
- IATA Shipper's Declaration of Dangerous Goods
- Commercial invoice with battery Wh declared per line
- Packing list with battery quantities and Wh
- IEC 62133-2 certificate (battery safety)
- Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS)
NURION supplies all of the above in a single PDF pack with each shipment.
6. Common mistakes
- **Stacked Sirius units in a single carton**: Sirius units must be packed individually in their own DG-rated carton — stacking voids UN38.3 packaging compliance.
- **Mixed-chemistry shipments**: Don't mix LiFePO4 and other lithium types in a single shipment without separate documentation per type.
- **Late DG booking**: DG bookings need to be filed 48 hours before flight departure with most carriers — book early.
- **Charging level**: Lithium batteries must ship at < 30 % state of charge per IATA rules. NURION ships at 25 %.
7. Lead time expectations
For a typical humanitarian shipment ex Shenzhen:
| Stage | Days |
|---|---|
| Production (in stock) | 1 |
| DG packing & documentation | 2 |
| Air-freight booking | 1 |
| Flight + customs | 3–5 |
| **Door-to-door** | **7–9** |
For emergency response, NURION reserves "ready-to-ship" stock in Shenzhen and Hong Kong of all standard Sirius and Nuria SKUs. Submit a Project Inquiry with your delivery deadline and we will confirm availability.