China Daily (Hong Kong)

Integratin­g with Shenzhen offers a way forward for aviation in HK

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Monday Vibes

The author is an editor with China Daily Hong Kong Edition.

Cathay Pacific, Hong Kong’s flagship carrier, admitted on May 22 it will slash 600 staff from its head office, the company’s largest job cuts in 20 years. The move came after the airline reported a staggering HK$575 million loss for last year and replaced its chief executive. Clearly the airline, with more than 70 years’ history, is stuck in quagmire.

Despite the apparent predicamen­t of Cathay, the developmen­t of Hong Kong’s civil aviation industry looks fine at first glance. The total number of passengers through Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport (HKIA) has grown from 47 million in 2007 to 70.3 million last year, making it the eighth-busiest airport in the world. However, competitio­n between major aviation hubs in the Pearl River Delta region has intensifie­d in recent years. The Guangzhou Baiyun Internatio­nal Airport handled 31 million passengers in 2007; the number almost doubled to 59.7 million last year. The Shenzhen Bao’an Internatio­nal Airport, once a minnow compared with HKIA with only 12.1 million passengers in 2007, last year transporte­d 42 million passengers, more than triple.

Considerin­g the Shenzhen airport is opening more internatio­nal routes and expanding rapidly, the status of HKIA as a regional aviation hub is facing imminent challenge. However, it would not be a wise choice for Hong Kong to engage in a headon competitio­n with Shenzhen, as the special administra­tive region is restrained by land scarcity and high constructi­on costs. A more appropriat­e solution would be for the airports in the two cities to achieve a status of symbiosis through coordinati­on and division of labor. The Shenzhen airport could focus on domestic routes — especially to second- and third-tier mainland cities, while the HKIA could continue to strengthen its internatio­nal links.

A bottleneck for cooperatio­n between the two airports is transport. It takes more than one hour to travel between the Shenzhen and Hong Kong airports by bus, and there are only a few ferry services every day. For passengers who may want to transfer between the two airports, slow and limited transport options are a major hindrance. To fix the bottleneck, Hong Kong and Shenzhen government­s should consider building a railway link between the two airports. Even a medium-speed train going at 160 kilometers per hour can finish the 40 km journey between the two airports in 15 minutes.

T he airpor ts railway link would effectivel­y integrate the two airports into one. Suppose a resident in Yinchuan, capital of the Ningxia Hui autonomous region in Northwest China, plans to spend his holiday in Penang, Malaysia. Because there is no direct flight between Shenzhen and Penang, nor between Hong Kong and Yinchuan, he can only choose Guangzhou as the transfer airport as it has direct flights to both. If the above-mentioned railway link is constructe­d, he can first take a domestic flight to the Shenzhen airport, take the train and arrive at HKIA in a wink, and then board a flight to Penang. Thus the railway link will bring more passengers to both the Hong Kong and Shenzhen airports.

The railway would also play a role beyond an airports link. The Guangdong province is building up a Pearl River Delta Rapid Transit (PRDRT) railway system, planning to link all nine Guangdong cities in the Pearl River Delta and some other cities in the province outside the region. The Guangzhou-Dongguan-Shenzhen Intercity Railway, a part of the PRDRT, also sets a station at the Shenzhen airport. Currently there is no link connecting Hong Kong to the railway system, thus the Hong Kong-Shenzhen airports railway would also connect the special administra­tive region with the PRDRT. It would facilitate integratio­n between Hong Kong and other cities in the GuangdongH­ong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area.

 ?? ROY LIU / CHINA DAILY ?? A woman in Central poses for a photo with a poster marking the 20th anniversar­y of the Hong Kong SAR.
ROY LIU / CHINA DAILY A woman in Central poses for a photo with a poster marking the 20th anniversar­y of the Hong Kong SAR.

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