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China Air Travel News

Shanghai Airlines to boost flights to Thailand

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

air shanghai airlines 1 2Shanghai Airlines plans to increase its flights between the mainland and Thailand to cater to growing passenger and cargo traffic.

The carrier has started a new route, from China’s emerging economic province of Chongqing to Bangkok, and is looking to offer direct service between Shanghai and Bangkok by the end of the year.

It is the first airline to offer a direct Chongqing-Bangkok route. It operates a 184-seat Boeing 737-800 on the route which takes about two and a half hours.

Late last year, Shanghai Airlines doubled its number of flights between Shanghai and Phuket to four a week, using a similar aircraft. The airline started flying Shanghai-Phuket route, which takes five hours, two years ago on a ‘regular charter’ basis.

Shanghai Airlines has since 2006 offered all-freighter services between Bangkok and Shanghai at three flights Boeing 757 cargo planes that have 30 tonnes of capacity.

About one million Chinese tourists visited Thailand last year and the Tourism Authority of Thailand expects the number to reach 1.3 million this year.

Their favorite destinations are Pattaya, Phuket and Koh Samui.

Freight movements between the two countries have also been surging due to growing trade volume. A good portion of shipments from Thailand to China are IT components.
Source: Bangkok Post

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Shanghai Air may order Airbus A330

Friday, December 14th, 2007

air shanghai airlines 1Shanghai Airlines is considering an order for Airbus A330 medium-range aircraft as it speeds up the expansion of its international network.

Zhou Chi, chairman of Shanghai Airlines said the company is looking to buy 10 single-aisle A320 aircraft. He said the company is also considering buying A330 aircraft, but has yet to decide the size of the order, adding that the wide-body planes could be used to reinforce its flights to neighbouring markets.

Shanghai Airlines, which had earlier placed an order for nine of Boeing’s 787 or Dreamliner, is also scheduled to launch daily flights to the United States and the German city of Hamburg next year.

But the plan may be postponed because of the delayed delivery of the Boeing aircraft.

President Fan Hongxi said Shanghai Airlines has now joined Star Alliance, the world’s largest airline grouping. It plans to expand its international network on its own or via code-sharing with other members of the alliance.

He said international flights now make up less than 10% of the airline’s sales and the airline hopes to raise that ratio to roughly 30% in five years, adding that Star Alliance membership would be a big help.

Sales of the Shanghai-based carrier, which operates a fleet of 59 aircraft, rose 23% to US$1.2 billion from January to September.
Source: China Daily and Cargo News Asia

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Shanghai Airlines a target for consolidation

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

air shanghai airlinesShanghai Airlines is a likely focus for further consolidation of Chinese commercial aviation as larger carriers, especially Air China, look for greater access to the country’s biggest city.

An Air China takeover of the second-level carrier would be a big step toward creating the balanced nationwide operator that China still lacks in any of its big-three airlines—China Southern, Air China and China Eastern.

With a domestic network operated by 59 aircraft, Shanghai Airlines has also caught the eye of China Eastern.

In Shanghai’s airports China Eastern serves nearly 40% of travelers.
Shanghai Airlines comes second, with 18%.
Air China, a mere 12%.

Air China needs a stronger presence in southern mainland China, as well as Shanghai, but in that part of the country it already has a foothold, a 25% stake in Shenzhen Airlines.

The airlines of China live in interesting times. Read the quite long and well researched story by clicking on Source.

There has been a query as to why we normally illustrate these stories with cabin crew instead of aircraft. First cabin crew tend to be a damn sight more attractive. Second, our pictures tend to be more vertical than horizontal. Vertical aircraft worry passengers.
Source: Aviation Week

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High hopes for Tokyo-Shanghai air link

Friday, October 5th, 2007

air jhaneda airportNewly inaugurated air services between Tokyo’s Haneda Airport (shown here) and Shanghai’s Hongqiao Airport are the second international air route from Haneda Airport, which generally has been dedicated to domestic routes.

The new service provides four round-trip flights a day, operated by Japan Airlines, All Nippon Airways, China Eastern Airlines and Shanghai Airlines.

Narita is Tokyo’s international airport but is located far from central Tokyo (1 hour by the fastest train) and in a different prefecture. It opened in 1978 after riots which reached war-like proportions.
Haneda is technically called Tokyo International Airport and is located in Tokyo proper. It is the busiest airport in Japan and the fourth-busiest in the world, even though it handles very little international traffic.
Hongqiao is Shanghai’s second airport.
Pudong is Shanghai’s international airport.

Both Haneda and Hongqiao are closer to their respective city centers than the main international airports for Tokyo and Shanghai. So a link between these two airports would be great for passengers provided the timing of the flights was right. Gate to gate, a one-way trip to central Shanghai from central Tokyo using the new air route takes about four hours — about an hour less than it takes when using Narita and Shanghai’s Pudong international airports.

Trouble is Haneda has few spare arrival and departure slots.

Thus, current flight schedules on the route are not convenient enough for businesspeople on a theoretical day trip to Shanghai. Even if they depart from Haneda Airport on the day’s first flight at 9:10 a.m., they could only stay in central Shanghai for up to an hour because the last flight heading for Haneda departs at 1:30 p.m.

By contrast, the last flight from Pudong to Narita departs at 5:05 p.m., with about 14 round-trip flights a day on the route. If early-morning and late-night flights on the route become possible, it may boost demand for other international services from Haneda.
Source: Daily Yomuri Online

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Six US-China air routes cleared for takeoff

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007

Air china southern2The US-China air-service agreement allows for one additional passenger flight by an airline of each country in 2007 and 2008, four in 2009, three in 2010, and two each in 2011 and 2012.

The US Department of Transportation (DOT) has announced the recipients. Six of the seven applicant airlines received new route authority, doubling air services between the United States and China by 2010.

Delta will begin its first service to China from Atlanta to Shanghai on March 30.
United, already with the most flights between the US and China, will, as reported, begin service between San Francisco and Guangzhou early next year.
Northwest Airlines and China Southern Airlines will offer daily nonstop flights in 2009 between Detroit and China.
China Southern Airlines, the nation’s largest carrier with hostess in our illustration, will begin daily, nonstop flights between Detroit and Beijing. Flights are expected to begin in March 2009.
Chinese carriers Hainan Airlines and Shanghai Airlines both plan to begin service to the US next year. Hainan has applied for service between Beijing and Seattle and Shanghai Airlines has applied to connect Shanghai to both Los Angeles and Seattle.

Note that Chinese airlines have yet to use all of their allotted frequencies. According to the agreement, Chinese airlines are currently allowed ten frequencies to the US but as of this month only have six scheduled flights.
Sources: Michigan Live and Asia Times

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