China will open a new air route for international traffic
tomorrow, a move that could reduce flight times between China and
Europe by an average of 30 minutes and save airlines US$30 million
in fuel cost every year.
"Initially, 110 flights a week could benefit from the route,
including those linking Europe and Southeast Asia," said Gunther
Matschnigg, the International Air Transport Association (IATA)'s
senior vice-president for safety, operations and
infrastructure.
Flights from Europe to Manila, for example, have to stop at Bangkok
to refuel. But the new route will make non-stop flights
possible.
"The opening of the new route demonstrates the Chinese
Government's determination to increase the efficiency of its air
space, which is definitely needed to prepare for the 2008 Olympic
Games in Beijing," Matschnigg said at a press conference on
Monday.
"We expect a traffic increase of at least 50 percent in China by
2008, plus about 15 percent more for the Games itself."
Officials from the Air Traffic Management Bureau and the General
Administration of Civil Aviation declined to comment on the new
route.
The route, also called IATA-1, is an alternative to the existing
route that is just north of the Himalaya Mountains.
Airlines using the old route have to be specially fitted out for
high altitudes, which require additional oxygen equipment. The
extra weight results in more fuel being used.
If they want to avoid flying over the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau,
airlines have to take a large detour over the northern part of the
Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
But the IATA-1 is a short cut to the south of that route that
also bypasses the plateau.
The IATA started discussions with the Chinese Government about
the new route back in 2000.
"There was lots of time spent in negotiations with the Chinese
military force that controls the nation's air space, designing
escape routes, and installing and testing new equipment for air
traffic control in that remote area," Matschnigg said.
"We appreciate the co-operation shown by the Chinese Government
in better using its airspace at a time when the airline industry is
bleeding from record high oil prices," said Giovanni Bisignani,
IATA's director-general and chief executive officer.
The new route will eliminate 2,860 hours of flying time, 27,000
tons of fuel, 84,800 tons of carbon dioxide emissions and 340 tons
of nitrogen oxide emissions annually, the IATA said.
Matschnigg said the IATA is in talks with the authorities about
opening other air routes over China.
Currently, only 30 percent of Chinese airspace is available for
civil aviation.
The IATA represents around 265 airlines that comprise 94 percent
of international scheduled air traffic.
(China Daily April 12, 2006)