Construction began on Thursday on what will be the world's
second highest airport in Kangding, a predominantly Tibetan region
in southwest China's Sichuan Province.
The airport will stand 4,280 meters above sea level, second in
height only to the airport in Qamdo, Tibet. The airport in Qamdo is
4334 meters above sea level.
With a budget of 960 million yuan (about US$120 million), the
new airport will have a 4,000-meter-long runway and will be capable
of handling planes such as the Boeing 737-700 series and Airbus
319s, according to Wu Hesheng, general manager of the Zhongnan
Airports Construction Corporation, builder of the Kangding
airport.
Plans for the airport were first drawn up 13 years ago but the
go-ahead for the construction by the state was only given last May.
It will begin service in 2008 and is designed to handle 330,000
passengers and 1,980 tons of cargo and mail annually.
Its location is deep in the sprawling mountains in western
Sichuan and because of its high altitude, workers will have to
tackle a range of problems such as frozen earth, said Fan
Yongzheng, general manager of Kangding Airport Company.
Situated between the Dadu and Yalong rivers, both tributaries of
the Yangtze River, Kangding boasts rich mineral, water and tourism
resources and serves as the seat of Sichuan's Tibetan Autonomous
Prefecture of Garze.
Due to its rough terrain and high altitudes the western region
of Sichuan was notorious for being difficult to access in ancient
times.
Li Bai, a famed poet from the Tang Dynasty (618-907), wrote that
traveling in Shu State (present-day Sichuan Province) was more
difficult than going to the heaven.
"Upon completion of the new airport, a corridor in the air will
be formed in western Sichuan, people will be able to travel in and
out of Garze more easily and all the natural barriers that have
restricted local economic development will be gone," said Yi Fan,
deputy leader of Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefectural
Government.
As China continues with its western development campaign, more
investment has poured into improving infrastructure in the
country's western regions.
Major projects completed this year alone include the Qinghai-Tibet Railway Line and Nyingchi
Airport, the third civil airport in Tibet, which began operation
last Friday.
(Xinhua News Agency September 8, 2006)