China Daily

Airports around world work to improve Chinese services

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

Beijing Capital Internatio­nal Airport, the largest air hub in the country, is helping foreign airports translate signs and train their staffs to deliver services in Chinese to improve the travel experience for Chinese tourists.

Han Zhiliang, the airport’s general manager, said at the Fifth Beijing Global Friend Airports CEO Forum on Thursday that his company has helped the Charles de Gaulle Internatio­nal Airport in Paris, Incheon Internatio­nal Airport in South Korea and several airports in Thailand to check and correct signs written in Chinese.

Beijing Capital has also been assisting Finland’s Helsinki Airport and Germany’s Frankfurt Airport with their efforts to improve services in Chinese.

Moreover, exchanges have been undertaken between Beijing Capital employees and their counterpar­ts in Munich and Frankfurt, Germany; Geneva, Switzerlan­d; and Havana, Cuba, Han said. Such programs enable foreign airport workers to better understand Chinese passengers and Chinese cultures, he added.

In October, Helsinki Airport

Kari Savolainen, CEO of Finland’s state-owned airport operator Finavia

in Finland will send several employees to work for three weeks at Beijing Capital, he said.

Sun Xiaoyi, deputy head of the Beijing airport’s service department, said a lot of foreign airports have reached out to ask for help with Chinese language services.

Having witnessed large numbers of Chinese travelers, airports around the world are striving to enhance local appeal to Chinese airlines and travelers. Signage in Chinese has become part of the basic infrastruc­ture, and many foreign airports have developed Chinese websites or mobile phone applicatio­ns.

Chinese tourists spent $215 billion during trips overseas in 2015, accounting for 17 percent of all overseas consumptio­n by travelers around the world, according to a report released by the World Tourism Cities Federation on Tuesday.

The United States, Japan, South Korea and Britain saw the biggest increase in Chinese visitors in 2015.

“Chinese travelers would find it convenient and comfortabl­e to use the facilities at Finnish airports because they have a lot of Chinesespe­aking employees, along with many digital tools designed for Chinese visitors, including a mobile phone applicatio­n capable of recognizin­g different Chinese dialects,” said Kari Savolainen, CEO of Finland’s stateowned airport operator Finavia.

Winfried Hartmann, senior vice-president of sales and customer service at Frankfurt Airport, said the airport is developing a mobile phone applicatio­n that can automatica­lly translate German signs into Chinese.

“In addition, we will strengthen our collaborat­ion with Beijing Capital to improve our service for Chinese travelers,” he said.

Chinese travelers would find it convenient and comfortabl­e to use the facilities at Finnish airports.”

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