Home

Domestic

Travel

Society


China Allows Airways to Impose Insurance Surcharge

China said Friday its domestic airlines have been allowed to levy surcharges of up to US$2.50 per passenger on international routes, as of October 15 in the wake of the terrorist attack on the United States on September 11.

In a circular issued Friday, the General Administration of Civil Aviation of China (GACA) said the new fees could also be imposed from October 15 on flights to and from the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macao.

According to the circular, domestic flights are currently exempt from the surcharge.

The new fees are necessary, it said, since global insurers have altered third-party war insurance, and war-related insurance premiums had risen dramatically since October 1.

Airlines owned by the Chinese mainland have to pay an extra one billion yuan (nearly US$1.2 billion) annually due to the move by the global insurers, according to the GACA.

However, the new surcharges to be collected by Chinese airlines are expected to cover only one fifth of their increased insurance expenditure.

(People's Daily 10/06/2001)

In This Series

CAAC Bans All Cutting Tools on Flights

State to Share Insurance Risks for Airlines

Regional Jets to Enter the Market

Aviation Industry to Regroup

Training School for Private Pilots to Open

References

China Appreciates Firm Anti-Terrorism Stance of Arab States

Hit Terrorists, But Don't Harm The Innocent: Chinese Pupils

Foreign Minister Meets Children of Chinese Victims

World Declares War on Terrorism

The World Stands by Americans Against Terrorist

HK Flights to US Cancelled, Consulate Shut

China Cancels Flights to US, All US-Bound Planes Land Safely

Bush's Remarks on Tuesday's Terrorist Attacks

Final Words From Hijacked Passenge

Official on Battles vs Separatists, Fundamentalists and Terrorists

China Denies Alleged Connection With Terrorist Organization

Archive

Web Link