China Daily (Hong Kong)

Airport authority head: Overseas airports need our skills, experience

- By WILLA WU in Hong Kong willa@chinadaily­hk.com

Editor’s note: In this series, China Daily interviews the heads of bureaus and other department­s of the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region. The heads discuss project plans, prospects, and ways to address the city’s current issues and challenges from their perspectiv­es.

The Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region’s expertise in the constructi­on and management of airports is much sought after by airport authoritie­s on the Chinese mainland and in foreign countries, according to the head of the Airport Authority Hong Kong.

Jack So Chak-kwong, chairman of the board of the Airport Authority Hong Kong, which is responsibl­e for the developmen­t and operation of the city’s internatio­nal airport, said Thailand has asked the airport authority for help in building a new airport in the Southeast Asian country. But he didn’t reveal what sort of aid the authority would offer.

Speaking to China Daily in a recent interview in Bangkok, So also cited Shanghai Hongqiao Internatio­nal Airport which Hong Kong has helped to manage in the past 13 years, as well as Zhuhai Airport and Hangzhou Internatio­nal Airport, since 2006.

“We’ve been involved in the building of urban railways and broadband systems in the past. So, for Hong Kong, actually, there is quite a lot of expertise we can export to other places. They would like our assistance in setting up their own systems,” he said.

So noted that many of his colleagues at Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport have been invited by certain European countries and Australia, not just Southeast Asia, to be their advisers or consultant­s.

He urged young Hong Kong profession­als to seek opportunit­ies in the Chinese mainland and overseas markets, as this would fit in well with the nation’s 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) in which the HKSAR should play a role in harmonizin­g relations between China and the world.

So was part of a Hong Kong business delegation that accompanie­d Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu to the 2022 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n meetings in Bangkok on Nov 18 and 19.

Before leaving for the APEC conference, So signed a memorandum of understand­ing on cooperatio­n between the Airport Authority Hong Kong and the Zhuhai municipal government on Nov 9. He described the agreement as a sign of Hong Kong’s commitment to building stronger ties with Zhuhai in Guangdong province, and propelling the aviation industry’s developmen­t in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area.

Under the memorandum framework, one of the collaborat­ion projects is a large-scale, high-end aviation industrial park to be set up in Zhuhai.

“This is a huge project as it would include not just airport management, but also aircraft maintenanc­e, aircraft parts storage, and even aircraft parts manufactur­ing, and eventually, assembly,” So said. The Zhuhai authoritie­s are very happy with such cooperatio­n.

So added that while he was in Bangkok, he told global business leaders that Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport had completed the constructi­on of its third runway.

The new 3,800-meter-long runway, built on 650 hectares of reclaimed land north of the existing airport island at Chek Lap Kok, started flight familiariz­ation operations on July 8. A cargo flight from Shanghai Pudong Internatio­nal Airport was the first commercial flight to touch down on the new runway.

The three-runway system will expand HKIA’s capacity by 50 percent, according to So.

“Before the new runway came into operation, we handled about 75 million passengers and roughly 5 million (metric) tons of cargo in 2019. With the new runway in place, we can now handle 120 million passengers and 10 million tons of cargo annually. So, we will retain our status as an internatio­nal aviation hub, as well as the world’s busiest cargo airport. This would give us the capacity to serve our nation, the Greater Bay Area and Southeast Asia,” he said.

Constructi­on work on HKIA’s three-runway system began in 2016. The entire project, including building the third runway, expanding the existing Terminal 2 and other support infrastruc­ture and systems, continued despite the social unrest in 2019 and the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020.

“Even in the darkest moments, people asked why were we still going ahead with a three-runway system? I said we still have confidence in our country and Hong Kong’s future. We’re not doing this for the next week or the next month. We are doing this for the next 50 or 100 years. We see a bright future for Hong Kong and we will maintain our role as the gateway to the world, and the superconne­ctor between China and the globe,” So said.

We’ve been involved in the building of urban railways and broadband systems in the past. So, for Hong Kong, actually, there is quite a lot of expertise we can export to other places. They would like our assistance in setting up their own systems.” Jack So Chak-kwong, chairman of the board of the Airport Authority Hong Kong

 ?? FLORENCE LI / CHINA DAILY ?? Jack So Chak-kwong, chairman of the board of the Airport Authority Hong Kong, talks to China Daily during an interview.
FLORENCE LI / CHINA DAILY Jack So Chak-kwong, chairman of the board of the Airport Authority Hong Kong, talks to China Daily during an interview.
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