China's first maritime rescue heliport went into trial operation
Saturday in Gaodong Town of Shanghai to deal with accidents in
waters off the country's coasts.
Located near Wusongkou and covering an area of 136,700 square
meters, the heliport has a 250-meter-long and 30-meter-wide runway,
a parking apron, a storehouse and a command center.
The facility has communications, navigation, weather-forecasting,
fire-fighting and fueling equipment meeting international
standards. It also boasts effective connections with major
hospitals in Shanghai to ensure prompt medical support for injured
people.
Li
Zongde, who is charge of meteorological services at the airport,
said there was no plan to fly the helicopters on Saturday due to
the rainy and foggy weather in Shanghai.
Currently, the helicopters can carry out rescue missions in an area
of 80 nautical miles only during the daytime and under good weather
conditions, heliport sources said.
China plans to establish three more heliports by 2005, next to
Bohai Bay, the Qiongzhou Straits and the Taiwan Straits, where
there is a higher likelihood of accidents, the English newspaper
China Daily on Saturday quoted Tian Jingyue, of the Ministry of
Communications' Maritime Salvage Bureau, as saying.
Insiders said China's program to reinforce its sea
search-and-rescue squads began after the 1999 Dashun ferry
disaster, in which some 282 people died when the ferry capsized
near Yantai in east China's Shandong Province.
(Xinhua News Agency March 15, 2003)