Global Times

CAAC to facilitate direct luggage transfer services at 29 airports

-

China’s civil aviation agency said it will pilot direct luggage transfer services at 29 airports, including two in Northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, in a bid to better serve customers.

The move comes in response to a rising travel demand, Jin Junhao, an official from the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China (CAAC) said on Thursday.

He said that these airports can cooperate with each other, with airlines and third parties, and that airlines could also cooperate with each other to provide services by means such as code sharing.

However, the official warned that there are still obstacles ahead, as the procedure will be very complicate­d.

Passengers are currently unable to enjoy direct transfers of luggage in any country, unless their tickets are issued from airlines of the same alliance, or the airlines have a code-sharing partnershi­p, according to the official.

He also said that the investment resources of transit airports are insufficie­nt, and some airlines worry that the new service will weaken their own network resources and bring a loss of customers, and that there is a lack of a unified informatio­n system to support data sharing.

The CAAC said that the coverage rate of direct routes between internatio­nal hubs and regional

airports is 25.6 percent, and that the coverage rate of direct routes between regional airports is only 0.6 percent.

China had a total of 235 airports by the end of last year, up six from the previous year.

More airlines are accelerati­ng their advances into the digital era, with major players sending clear signals of new opportunit­ies worldwide.

China Southern Airlines last

month launched its e-tags on flights from Guangzhou, South China’s Guangdong Province, and it is the first domestic carrier to provide such services.

The move was mirrored by China Eastern Airlines, which released its first self-made electronic baggage tag as well.

The CAAC will plow ahead this year to promote digital systems, and China’s civil aviation authoritie­s will push forward integratio­n of the civil aviation sector with new technologi­es such as facial recognitio­n, automatic vending and luggage check-in, and intelligen­t inquiry services, Xinhua reported earlier.

The CAAC will also encourage the integratio­n of new artificial intelligen­ce and biological feature recognitio­n technologi­es in its security operations, and it will promote in-flight connectivi­ty.

The regulator said that Beijing Daxing Internatio­nal Airport will adopt multiple new technologi­es, such as self check-in, self baggage check-in and facial recognitio­n in security checks to make it smarter and more efficient.

It is expected that the self checkin facilities will serve roughly 86 percent of its passengers, and the self baggage check-in roughly 76 percent, according to the CAAC.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China