Global Times

China loosens rules on flights with detected COVID infection cases

- By GT staff reporters Page Editor: shenweiduo@globaltime­s.com.cn

China’s aviation regulator has decided to relax rules on suspending overseas flights due to COVID-19 in a move many believe will stimulate inbound travel.

Starting from Sunday, any flight with five detected COVID-19 cases will be suspended for one week when the confirmed cases account for four percent of all those onboard, and for two weeks when the confirmed cases account for eight percent, the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China (CAAC) said on Sunday.

The rule does not mention policy settings for flights with less than five confirmed cases.

“The move aims to promote Chinese and foreign travel exchanges, and aims to scientific­ally and accurately do a better job in epidemic prevention and control,” the CAAC said.

Previously, flights with more than five but fewer than 10 confirmed COVID-19 passengers were suspended for two weeks. For flights with 10 passengers infected with COVID-19, airlines must suspend their operation for four weeks, according to rules in place since May 1 of 2021.

Market watchers said the requiremen­ts for inbound travel are set to be loosened.

For example, a Boeing 777, which can carry 305 to 440 people, is allowed to carry 228 to 330 passengers according to the 75 percent capacity requiremen­t set by CAAC, so when the number of infected individual­s is 4 percent of those onboard, the flight will be suspended for one week, a significan­t loosening of the previous requiremen­t, Wang Yi, a manager responsibl­e for air ticket data from industry informatio­n provider VariFlight, told the Global Times on Sunday.

“In the past, the rule attached great importance to the number of confirmed cases when it reached five, but now it doesn’t,” Wang noted.

The new rules have cut the suspension period in half, which will help with the resumption of internatio­nal flights to China, especially for longhaul interconti­nental flights from Europe and the US with wide-body aircraft, Lin Zhijie, an independen­t market watcher, told the Global Times on Sunday.

VariFlight data showed that the average utilizatio­n rate of wide-body aircraft in July this year was 1.16 hours per day, compared with 10-11 hours in 2019.

In 2020, China adopted “Five One” policy to curb imported cases, which allowed Chinese carriers to carry out only one outbound flight per week on one route to any country, and foreign airlines to operate just one flight a week into China.

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