China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Bird’s-eye views are coming to Tibet

- By PALDEN NYIMA andDAQIONG in Lhasa Contact the writers at palden_nyima@ chinadaily.com.cn

A helicopter tour service will be launched in Lhasa, capital of the Tibet autonomous region, in August to allow tourists to view the plateau landscape from the sky.

Tourism companies have been considerin­g aerial tours in Lhasa for years, but thePotalaT­ourism and Culture Group is the first to get approval for flights in a designated airspace.

The airspace covers a part of Lhasa and the Namtso Lake area, 240 kilometers from the capital, according to Dawa Phuntsok, president of the tour group.

The lake, calledHeav­enly Lake in the Tibetan language, is one of three holy lakes in Tibet.

Tours will be provided by four Eurocopter H125s and two Bell 505s. The first two helicopter­s will be delivered in June, with the first flight scheduled for August, Dawa Phuntsok said.

Twenty-one pilots from the Tibetan ethnic group— including seven women — along with seven helicopter maintenanc­e specialist­s, received eight months of training in Jiangsu and Yunnan provinces.

Meanwhile, a general aviation airport covering an area of nearly 4 hectares is under constructi­on in Lhasa’s Tsechoglin­g Valley. It will be able to accommodat­e 30 helicopter­s and is expected to be operationa­l in late July, he said.

Liu Jie, vice-president of Ruoer General Aviation Developmen­t Group — the Nanjing-based company responsibl­e for purchasing the aircraft and arranging pilot training — said helicopter services are necessary in Tibet, as “air tours are more time-efficient and convenient than land transporta­tion”.

“Using helicopter­s for travel services, as well as for medical rescue, is essential for Lhasa to be an internatio­nal tourism city,” Liu said.

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