With the fastest growing air transport market in the world,
China pledged Sunday to open the aviation sector wider to private
and foreign investment while spurring development of regional
airlines.
The effects of SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) virus,
which haunted many parts of the country last year, turned out to be
short-lived and the country's air travel picked up very quickly,
said Gao Hongfeng, vice-minister of the General Administration of
Civil Aviation of China (CAAC).
In the first nine months of this year, more than 90 million
passengers traveled by air in China, a surge of 50.2 percent year
on year, show the latest statistics of the CAAC.
Speaking at the International Aviation and Aerospace Forum, Gao
said air transport in China is growing at a pace unseen in other
countries and holds unmatched development potential.
"In the whole of 2004, the number of air travelers in China is
expected to rise to a record high of 120 million."
As the country's rapid economic development will continue to
stoke demands for air transport, the civil aviation sector will
realize sustainable growth by implementing revamping and reforming
policies, he said.
Gao said in the years ahead, administrative limits required for
civil aviation projects will be reduced to create allow enterprises
to compete on a fair footing, while guaranteeing the interests of
the State, enterprises and consumers.
For example, operation rights for domestic air routes will be
subject to ever-relaxing procedures, he said.
In addition to State-owned firms, foreign and private companies
will be "guided and encouraged" to invest in air transportation,
airports and other civil aviation projects, he said.
"We'll actively adapt ourselves to the global air transport
liberalization tendency by phasing in the opening of China's air
transport market," he said.
The vice-minister did not specify, but he said his agency will
support code-sharing between Chinese and foreign airlines and for
them to forge strategic partnership or instigate other joint
marketing efforts.
Between 1980 and 2003, more than US$30 billion in foreign
investment was pooled into China's civil aviation sector in
projects including plane and engine maintenance, ground service and
air catering, Gao said.
The vice-minister also said China will step up international
collaboration to prevent terrorism threatening civil aviation
safety.
Yang Yuzhong, vice-president of the China Aviation Industry Corp
I (AVIC I), China's major aircraft manufacturer, Sunday said his
company aims to become the country's leading regional airliners
supplier.
Demands on regional jets will be growing in China as air travel
between small and medium-sized cities becomes more frequent, said
Liao Quanwang, vice-director of the Aviation Industry Development
Research Center of China.
With the optimization of the country's air routes and fleet
structure, the country's airlines will favor planes with 50 to 70
seats, according to a statement from the center.
The AVIC I announced the ARJ21, China's advanced regional jet
program, four years ago. Before manufacturing of ARJ21 started last
December, the company had already clinched 35 orders the jets, said
company president Liu Gaozuo.
"We offer regional jets of the best quality but at a price and
operational cost up to 10 percent lower than foreign counterparts,"
Liu said. "More importantly, we provide products that most suit
Chinese market needs."
The forum precedes the week-long 5th Airshow China, that
officially started Sunday afternoon. The biennial event has been
held in the coastal city of Zhuhai in South China's Guangdong
Province since 1996.
(China Daily November 1, 2004)