Latest News:  

English>>China Society

Shanghai take-offs 'free of air traffic restrictions'

By Yang Jian (Shanghai Daily)

13:20, July 30, 2013

Shanghai's Pudong and Hongqiao international airports are among eight in the country that will be free from air traffic restrictions on take-offs, a senior civil aviation official has said.

Air traffic restrictions - often a result of giving way to military operations or if destination airports are simply too busy - are major causes of flight delays in China.

Take-offs from Shanghai, plus airports in Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Kunming and Xi'an, will be free from restrictions, said Cui Jianqiang, deputy director of the Air Traffic Management Bureau under the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC), on his personal microblog over the weekend.

CAAC's east China bureau has yet to receive official confirmation, a senior official there told Shanghai Daily yesterday.

"Airports cannot be totally free of restrictions but can give priorities to take-off," the official said.

However, aircraft coming in to land will still face delays, "stacking up" and circling the airport until they are given a landing slot.

"For passengers, the waiting was just moved from the ground to the sky," said the bureau official.

The punctuality rate of domestic flights dropped to 71.7 percent between January and May - a decline of 3.4 percent year on year.

CAAC director Li Jiaxiang said 42 percent of delays were due to carrier operations, followed by air traffic control procedures at 26 percent, with bad weather responsible for 21 percent.

Military forces are granted special authorization to use the country's air space. About 25 percent of airspace is generally used for military purposes.

The eight airports covered by the freedom from air traffic restrictions initiatives are the busiest in China.

They will coordinate for flights to land at different airports during air traffic restrictions or bad weather, Cui said.

The rapid growth of airport capacity nationwide has led to increased demand for air space, leading to more delays.

The airports in Beijing and Shanghai have the most flight delays in the world, according to an industry survey.

Beijing Capital International Airport came bottom among 35 international airports surveyed, with a punctuality rate of 18.3 percent, US-based aviation data provider FlightStats said.

Pudong International Airport in Shanghai was only one place above, with a flight punctuality rate of less than 30 percent.

We Recommend:

San Francisco crash survivors come back home

China’s weekly story (2013.7.5-7.12)

A glimpse of residents' daily life in Sansha

Photos:The world's oldest woman

Students' survival challenge in a strange city

Fuzhou tops the list of hottest cities in China

Sea foods, a luxury bite in summer

College student car models show youthful vigor

Nightlife at Foxconn Zhengzhou park

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:GaoYinan、Chen Lidan)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. 'HK Teenager Military Summer Camp' ended

  2. APF officers and men in actual-combat drill

  3. Global Tiger Day marked in Jakarta

  4. Women drifting lifeguards team set up

  5. Pretty showgirls backstage at Chinajoy

  6. Nations unite to help tigers

  7. Five generations of ancient Miao jewelry

  8. Famous Buddha heads fallen by time

  9. GSK probe reveals something rotten

  10. Complaints rise over baby formula imports

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. China's economy will continue to prosper
  2. Western countries face dilemma on Syrian conflict
  3. Reform, not incentives, to drive expansion
  4. Lenovo reigns as king of the hill
  5. Small exporters need more help to pass tough times
  6. Debate on internationalizing education
  7. Bo Xilai indicted for corruption
  8. China rules out provisional economic stimulus plan
  9. Removal of deposit rate ceiling not imminent
  10. Feeble Japanese-Philippine 'axis' doomed

What’s happening in China

3 killed, 5 injured in S China knife attack

  1. Beijing police arrests airport blast suspect
  2. No epidemic outbreaks in quake-hit NW China
  3. Man stands trial over poisoned dumplings
  4. Explosion hits chemical plant in E China
  5. Floods, mudslides claim 22 in Gansu