South China Morning Post

Internatio­nal flight numbers take off after slow recovery

Air China adds routes and reconnects with Cuba and Brazil, but connection­s to US still sluggish

- Mia Nulimaimai­ti miyasha.nulimaimai­ti@scmp.com

A resumption of internatio­nal flights to and from China may be faster than expected, buoyed by the restoratio­n of outbound travel, analysts and local media said, although the recovery of connection­s with the United States remains slow.

Air China would progressiv­ely roll-out four internatio­nal routes starting from tomorrow, the airline said on its official WeChat account on Tuesday.

Routes between Beijing and Riyadh in Saudi Arabia and Dhaka in Bangladesh would be added, while the capital would also be reconnecte­d with Sao Paulo in Brazil as well as Havana in Cuba via a stopover in the Spanish capital of Madrid.

The flight to Sao Paulo is China’s first direct route to Brazil – one of the longest in the world – and Air China hopes it “will strengthen the connection between China and South America, and help Chinese enterprise­s better expand the South American market”.

The national carrier said it had restored 84 per cent of its internatio­nal routes to pre-pandemic levels, with routes to Southeast Asia surpassing the previous level by between 20 and 30 per cent.

Internatio­nal flights in China experience­d a sluggish recovery last year following the lifting of pandemic restrictio­ns, while a recent uptick in travel ahead of the May Day holiday – also known as Labour Day – next week may drive a faster recovery in the internatio­nal aviation sector.

The surge in outbound travel demand ahead of the five-day May Day holiday, which starts on Wednesday, is expected to drive the recovery of internatio­nal flights operated by Chinese airlines, Zhongtai Securities said.

“China’s airlines are expected to bottom out this year,” the securities company said. “We believe [Chinese airlines] will see a strong recovery for both the supply and demand side as May Day travel heats up.”

Ahead of the May Day holiday, 790,000 internatio­nal flight tickets had been booked as of Monday, representi­ng an increase of over 1.5 times compared to the same period last year, according to Chinese booking firm Umetrip.

China transporte­d 14.12 million passengers on internatio­nal routes in the first quarter of the year, marking a 22 per cent decrease from the same period in 2019, the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China (CAAC) said last week.

But it is close to CAAC’s target set in January to resume internatio­nal flights to around 80 per cent of pre-pandemic levels, with 6,000 passenger flights per week targeted by the end of the year.

Flights to Southeast Asia accounted for 41.6 per cent of the total, with South Korea, Japan and Thailand the top three destinatio­ns, CAAC added.

China Eastern Airlines said its internatio­nal flights have been restored to about 90 per cent of the levels seen in 2019, with Southeast Asian routes surpassing pre-pandemic levels.

China Southern Airlines, meanwhile, said its internatio­nal flights during the summer were expected to resume to 80 per cent of pre-pandemic levels.

Data from airlines suggested that China’s internatio­nal aviation sector was recovering faster than expected, Shanghai-based media outlet Yicai said yesterday.

But flights to the US are experienci­ng a sluggish recovery, with Air China’s routes having only recovered to roughly 30 per cent of pre-pandemic levels. China Southern Airlines said its figure stood at about 21 per cent.

Only six airlines in China operate round-trip flights between the country and the US.

US officials have already permitted Chinese airlines to operate 50 round-trip flights from March 31, up from 35, but the level is still well below the pre-pandemic level of 340.

“The recovery level of internatio­nal routes is an important factor in whether China’s civil aviation can turn a profit this year,” Yicai said.

 ?? Photo: Bloomberg ?? China’s internatio­nal travellers are starting to fly again with numbers on the increase amid post-pandemic airline recovery.
Photo: Bloomberg China’s internatio­nal travellers are starting to fly again with numbers on the increase amid post-pandemic airline recovery.

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