By Eva Richardson – The Logistic News
Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport has been awarded Best European Airport 2025 by Skytrax, a title that not only recognizes a dramatic leap in operational performance but also signals the return of France as a driving force in the future of air transport infrastructure.
This recognition, coming after years of mixed rankings, is less about prestige and more about systemic turnaround. Roissy’s first-place finish is the culmination of infrastructure reform, digital modernization, and cargo excellence, pushing it ahead of former leaders like Schiphol, Zurich, and Munich.
From “functional” to “formidable”: A deliberate reengineering
Five years ago, CDG was efficient but unloved. Long transfer times, fragmented terminals, and low satisfaction among non-Francophone travelers kept the airport out of the top tier. That has changed.
Between 2021 and 2024, the operator, Groupe ADP, implemented a multi-pronged strategy:
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Terminal harmonization (notably T1–T3 integration)
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80% biometric passport control coverage
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Baggage AI-routing reducing mishandling by 36%
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24/7 multilingual live passenger assistance
These aren’t aesthetic changes—they’re operational fundamentals.
Freight: The quiet revolution behind the headline
Often absent from award narratives, cargo was a pillar in CDG’s win.
Roissy now handles over 2.3 million tonnes annually, positioning it as Europe’s #2 cargo hub, just behind Frankfurt.
What changed?
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A pharma-dedicated handling zone added in 2023
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Cross-dock logistics tailored for e-commerce giants
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Streamlined customs pre-clearance in under 2 hours
For DHL, FedEx, and luxury brands, CDG has become “a no-excuse, on-time delivery gateway,” according to one industry source.
Sustainability that isn’t PR
Skytrax also pointed to CDG’s measurable climate roadmap—rare in an industry heavy on promises and light on results.
By mid-2024:
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All internal terminal shuttles are electric
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68% of ramp vehicles use non-fossil energy
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Buildings operate on 72% renewable power
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CDG has published real, third-party audited Scope 1–3 emissions
No greenwashing here—only infrastructure that meets EU benchmarks five years early.
What this means for Paris, and Europe
This award isn’t only about CDG—it’s about what it represents for France’s position in Europe’s aviation hierarchy.
With the upcoming CDG Express rail link (2026) and direct pressure on Brussels for slot coordination reform, Roissy now holds both technical leadership and political leverage.
In other words: CDG didn’t just win. It earned a seat at the table for what comes next in European air transport.
Eva Richardson covers infrastructure, policy, and air cargo strategy for The Logistic News. Her reporting focuses on the intersection of transport, geopolitics, and trade.