China's civil aviation authorities consider to choose southern
suburbs in Beijing as site for a second international airport for
the Chinese capital, which is faced with gobbling air transport
demand in both passengers and cargos in the coming decade.
An official with the General Administration of Civil Aviation of
China (CAAC) said, the most palpable site for the new international
airport would be south to the city on either south or north bank of
the Yongding River, which divides Beijing and bordering Hebei
Province, the oversea-edition People's Daily reported
Thursday.
The official, whose name was not released by the newspaper, said
the CAAC has already submitted the site selection proposals to the
State Council, which mandates the National Development and Reform
Commission (NDRC) to review the CAAC proposals.
The CAAC official said before making the proposals, the
administration researched and analyzed air traffic, geographic
conditions and ground transport layouts in areas which are chosen
as candidates, the newspaper said.
"If we put the new jumbo airport in the southern suburbs," the
officials was quoted as saying, "it will construct a tripod of air
transport hubs together with the existing Beijing Capital
International Airport and the big airport in Tianjin."
Beijing Capital International Airport (BCIA), the busiest one in
China, just opened its third runway Monday. The new runway, 3,800
meters long and 60 meters wide, was built for meeting rapidly
increasing air demands for the coming Olympics in 2008. It is part
of an expansion project that includes a new terminal building, 100
new aprons, a cargo zone and auxiliary facilities.
"The airport handles 1,100 arrival and departure flights every
day. That will probably rise to 1,500 to 1,600 and peak at 1,900
during the Olympics next year, so the third runway is much needed,
" said a BCIA spokesperson.
BCIA, a Hong Kong-listed company, saw 376,600 arrivals and
departures as well as transported 48.65 million global passengers
in 2006, ranked among the busiest 10 airports in the world.
Although the transport capacity of BCIA, 27 kilometers northeast
to Beijing, would be enhance remarkably to 60 million passengers
and 1.8 million tons of cargo each year, Beijing still needs a new
international airport, which is expect to alleviate overheated
ground traffic to BCIA and further accommodate more and more
transcontinental flights to China, an NDRC official said.
According to the NDRC urban planning towards 2010, construction
for the new international airport will begin by 2010. The proposed
new site would be most likely under jurisdiction of Daxing
District.
"We expect the new airport would dynamically boost local economy
in Daxing and adjacent Langfang, Zhuozhou and other cities in
Hebei," Shen Baochang, head official in Daxing said.
Other previous proposals included candidate locations such as
Zhuozhou, a satellite city to Beijing, and even somewhere near
Tianjin, a metropolis about 90 kilometers southeast to Beijing.
Wu Liangyong, a Qinghua University professor who is a recognized
architect, suggested a place near Tianjin be the site for Beijing's
second international airport.
The new airport, in Wu's mind, might be expanded to a modern
city and connected to both Beijing and Tianjin by expressways.
Besides BCIA, Beijing now has two airports for civilian use,
with the much smaller one, Nanyuan airport, being located on the
southern edge of the city. The transport capacity of Nanyuan
airport, operated by the Air Force-turned civilian carrier of China
United Airlines (CUA), is insignificant with only about 15
passenger flight routes and a few cargo routes.
(Xinhua News Agency November 2, 2007)