China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tarheels look for nonstop flights to China

- By AARON HAGSTROM in New York aaronhagst­rom@chinadaily­usa.com

It’s home to universiti­es and technology companies, and now North Carolina’s Research Triangle area wants a nonstop flight to China.

On Tuesday, Raleigh-Durham Internatio­nal Airport (RDU) hosted a symposium at Duke University for 100 state and local business, university and government leaders to discuss the benefits and challenges of a 7,000-mile nonstop flight to China, according to the Raleigh News & Observer.

The Research Triangle Park was created in 1951 to increase innovation in the area. It is bordered by Duke University, North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

A nonstop flight from the Raleigh-Durham Internatio­nal Airport (RDU) would likely increase Chinese tourism and investment­s, as well as US exports to China, according to Michael Walden, agricultur­e and economics professor at North Carolina State University.

“A direct flight would give North Carolina businesses easier access to China for promoting North Carolina products and services and evaluating the Chinese market,” Walden wrote in WRAL TechWire, a Triangleba­sed technology publicatio­n. “This is important because China appears to be refocusing its economy by putting greater emphasis on household purchases of its rapidly expanding middle-class.”

In 2017, air carriers added nine new routes from RDU, including a nonstop service to San Francisco through Alaska Airlines’ Virgin America.

Last December, RDU Airport Authority CEO Michael Landguth said that it could take at least three years, and probably five to seven years to get direct service to China, according to the Triangle Business Journal.

Part of the plan is to build a runway that would be 11,500 feet long so that large heavy fuel-laden jets can safely take off in all weather.

One challenge is finding an airline willing to try the longdistan­ce route, Bob Mann, of airport consulting firm R.W. Mann and Co in Port Washington, New York, told China Daily.

“If there is going to be a carrier (flying RDU to China), it will be a Chinese carrier,” Mann said.

“(But) it’s a high threshold to clear to get an airline to serve Raleigh-Durham-to-China.”

The US and China don’t have an “open skies” agreement so any new flight must be approved by both government­s.

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