Showing great ambition to boost airport industry, the
Chinese mainland will invest 140 billion yuan (US$17.5 billion) in
the construction of airports during the 11th five-year plan from
this year to 2010, a Chinese official said.
"In the next five years, we are going to launch 71
airport expansion projects, relocate 11 airports and build 49 new
airports," Zhang Haidong, from the General Administration of Civil
Aviation of China, said at the Fifth Airport Cities World
Conference and Exhibition (ACWCE) in Hong Kong which ended
Wednesday.
He expected the mainland airport industry will have an
average growth rate at 11 percent from 2006 to 2020.
Of the 40 airports worldwide, airlines, government
bodies and aviation-related organizations attending the ACWCE, 17
were from the Chinese mainland, including Beijing Capital
International Airport, Shanghai Pudong International Airport and
Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport.
Representatives said that the Chinese mainland airport
industry is growing rapidly. As major airports are evolving from a
city's airport to an airport city, becoming the focal point of
people, cargo, capital and information flows, an airport city will
be an increasingly important economic growth engine for local and
regional development.
Beijing Capital
International Airport expansion project
is the largest one of all. With a total investment of 25 billion
yuan (US$3.13 billion), the airport will become a transport hub
with an annual capacity of 90 million passengers turnover and 9
million tons cargo turnover by 2015.
"Beijing government has listed the airport economic
zone into the 11th five-year plan. So far the free trade logistics
garden near the airport has got approval from departments
concerned. The Beijing Conference Center is also near the airport.
They will support and push forward the development of the airport
economic zone," President of Beijing Capital Airports Holding
Company Li Peiying said.
Shanghai, the single city in
the Chinese mainland with two international airports - Pudong and
Hongqiao, is striving to build an integrated complex hub, which
targets at a combined capacity of 110 million passengers by
2015.
To help achieve the target, a 12 square kilometer free
trade logistics area near the airport is built in the meanwhile.
The government also has decided to build a 86 km cargo expressway
as an international passage between the airport and the Yangtze
River Delta Region, Chairman and President of Shanghai Airport
Authority Wu Nianzu said.
He added that the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway
Station, the Shanghai-Hangzhou Maglev Train Station and the Urban
Terminal for Yangtze River Delta Region will meet at Hongqiao
International Airport when the Terminal II of Pudong International
Airport is finished and starts operation in 2008.
A 100 square kilometer economic zone will be
established around the relocated Guangzhou Baiyun International
Airport, housing industrial, logistics and commercial areas,
President of Guangdong Airport Management Corporation Liu Zijing
said.
With a spider-like network of expressways with the
downtown of Guangzhou, one can reach major cities in the Pearl
River Delta Region within a couple of hours departing from the
Baiyun International Airport, Liu said.
Though confident in the future of the airport
industry, Zhang Haidong admitted there remains a lot of challenges
ahead. "Lack of infrastructure and airspace capacity are our major
problems," he said.
He hoped more foreign loans and capital could be
pooled to the industry.
(Xinhua News Agency September 14, 2006)
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