Saturday, December 29, 2007

Chinese Online Class - Civil aviation industry 'developing too fast'

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BIZCHINA / Center

Civil aviation industry 'developing too fast'

By Xin Dingding (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-09-01 09:11

The civil aviation authority warned the air transport industry is
developing "too fast", and is confronted with "huge pressure to ensure
safety".

"The fast pace needs control by scientific measures otherwise, any
disaster could severely hamper the industry's healthy development,"
according to a statement which quoted the head of the CAAC Yang Yuanyuan
as saying.

Passenger and cargo throughput has increased by nearly 20 percent year on
year, about 6 percentage points above forecast. More aircraft coming on
stream has also been "excessive", the CAAC said.

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Statistics show that the number of aircraft between 1996 and 2000 was 111
and between 2001 and 2005, 336.

In the first six months of this year, 56 more aircraft have been added.
It is estimated that the net increase between 2006 and 2010 will hit a
record 725.

The race to open more airlines is also on. Ten new airlines are in the
pipeline waiting approval, in addition to six private carriers and four
that started operations in June 2005, the CAAC said.

With insufficient qualified personnel, airports and airspace, the growth
"is too much for the industry to handle and may produce high risks in
flight safety", the CAAC said.

Although China has experienced no major accidents in the past 33 months,
the administration is worried it might repeat the mistakes it made
between 1990 and 1993.

"A major reason for having nine accidents between 1992 and 1994 was
growth had been too rapid for the industry to cope with flight safety,"
the CAAC said.

To further ensure safety, the administration has cut daily flights in and
out of the Beijing Capital International Airport by 48 since August 15,
and said it will not accept applications for most new airlines before
2010.

Following a Taiwan-based China Airlines 737-800 aircraft bursting into
flames on landing in Japan on August 20, the administration issued two
new orders in a week on passenger safety.

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