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Opinion / China Watch

China's runway challenge: More airports needed
(Air Transport World)
Updated: 2006-03-01 15:42

http://www.atwonline.com/magazine/article.html?articleID=1532

With fewer than 200 airports certified to handle transport category aircraft, China will have to move mountains of earth to ensure that ground infrastructure keeps pace with the rapid development of air travel.

If China is to become the world's largest aviation market by 2020, it will have to move mountains of earth to provide enough runways. The country has just 196 certified airports for transport aircraft and 329 "GA Temporary Landing Points" to serve a population of just over 1.3 billion. By comparison, the US with 270 million people has 14,807 airports, while Australia with just over 20 million has 444 and tiny Iceland has 100.

The challenge is not only to increase the number of airports but to improve existing infrastructure as well. China has spent $30 billion since 1990 upgrading 90 landing fields and building 47 new airports. Currently, 133 airports are served by airlines. Of these, just 39 account for 93.5% of total traffic while 85 handle fewer than 500,000 passengers a year, the majority operating at a loss, according to CAAC.

To help fund the development of airports and improve their commercial viability, CAAC transferred the ownership of 90 regional facilities to local governments, giving them an incentive to invest ahead of possible privatization. That process, which was started in 2002, was completed in July 2004 and involved CNY40 billion ($4.96 billion) in assets and 50,000 staff. At the same time, Beijing, Shanghai, Xiamen and Shenzhen were privatized and listed.

CAAC commenced construction on 35 new airports in 2004, 33 of them regional facilities, and the Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation estimates that China will have 240 commercial airports by 2010. It estimates further that the capital needed to meet that infrastructure requirement will top CNY10 billion a year. But as would be expected, development has not kept up with demand and CAAC reports that 18 airports were at capacity by the end of 2005 and another 29 will join them by 2010.

According to DG-CAAC Airport Dept. Zhang Guanghui, the problem lies not only with the capital requirements of building airports but also a shortage of suitable management. Zhang told delegates at an EU-China Aviation Summit last June that the country's larger airports "are not strong enough to participate in international competition" and smaller ones "are facing strong competition from other transportation means." Despite those challenges, he is bullish, forecasting that by 2010 the number of airports served by airlines will climb from 133 to 160 and by 2020 there will be 200 such airports with total traffic of 1.4 billion passengers and 30 million tons of cargo.

The cornerstone of CAAC's current strategy is developing Beijing International, Shanghai Pudong and Baiyun International into internationally and domestically important aviation hubs and centers for both passenger and cargo operations. These airports are home bases respectively for Air China, China Eastern and China Southern, the country's three largest carriers. CAAC also wants Chengdu, Kunming, Xi'an, Wuhan, Shenyang and Wulumuqi transformed into regional hubs. But while it may want to create a hub strategy, there are many other factors at work, including unsuitable geographic location of key hubs; hubs outside China becoming points of entry, permitting more direct flights; the need for regional governments to attract airlines to justify infrastructure development; emergence of both domestic and international low-cost airlines in China; the growing role of regional jets, and the impact of regional cargo airports.

To understand the dynamics of China, one must appreciate that the country is made up of 11 ethnic groups living in 23 provinces within five autonomous regions and speaking eight major languages. There are also vast disparities in wealth, ranging from per capita GDP of $5,000 in Yuman Province to $40,000 in downtown Shanghai.

Not surprisingly, many of the provinces with low GDP are areas of higher population density. According to Airclaims' International Transport and Tourism Consultancy's "2004 Airport Analysis," Henan Province in the central-east has a population of 100 million but accounts for only 1.2% of total departing seats while the Shanghai metropolitan area has 18 million people and accounts for 16%. In industrialized Guangdong Province adjacent to Hong Kong, the two major cities of Shenzhen and Guangzhou have 18% of the population and account for 94% of total departing seats in the province.

Essentially, airline operations are concentrated in the coastal regions, with the three major cities accounting for 45.5% of departing seats in the Chinese mainland, a percentage that has changed little since 1998. In stark contrast, reports Airclaims, the large regions in the west, which represent 49% of the country's area and 12.8% of the population, produced just 0.8% of departing seats in 2004. In the international context the imbalance is even greater, with the big three cities accounting for 72% of departing seats. However, Airclaims Chief Economist Peter Morris believes that "as trade and markets develop in the rest of China, pressures will increase for direct international services for the true origin-destination markets." He adds, "While hubs may suit both [major] airport operators and airlines for awhile, inevitably the pressure for air services to benefit other regions directly will build." The cities in these areas are massivewhile Europe and the US have five cities with more than 5 million residents, China has 12.
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