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Misery for Chinese air passengers as flight delays hit new heights

ElectricLightOrchestra

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Misery for Chinese air passengers as flight delays hit new heights


Passengers left low as postponements and cancellations rise to highest levels in years as a third of departures fail to take off on schedule

PUBLISHED : Monday, 10 August, 2015, 12:10am
UPDATED : Monday, 10 August, 2015, 4:54pm

Jessie Lau [email protected]

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Children sit on luggage carts at Beijing Capital International Airport after flights were cancelled due to bad weather. Photo: AP

Spending hours trapped on the tarmac is the stuff of nightmares for many air passengers. But for an increasing number of Chinese travellers, it's a reality.

Flight delays and cancellations increased for the fourth consecutive year last year to reach their highest levels since such data was first made available in 2006, according to the Civil Aviation Administration.

About 937,000 - a third - of all mainland flights did not leave on time last year, according to the regulator. It blamed air traffic control, weather and the airlines in roughly equal measure.

Delays and poor communication have become big gripes for frequent fliers, many of whom now expect such problems.

"If you can leave within two or three hours of your scheduled departure time, that's pretty much on time," said James Hsiao Mingjie, 35, an American lawyer in Hong Kong and a frequent flier to Shanghai.

Chinese airports and airlines ranked the worst in the world for punctuality last year, according to US-based FlightStats.

Cathay Pacific was reported to have planned to cut flights between Hong Kong and Shanghai, after mainland airspace limitations caused 230 flight delays in May and June between the cities.

Hsiao recalled waiting on the tarmac for five hours on a Shanghai-bound flight from Hong Kong last autumn. Hsiao had sat on the plane for about four hours when it was required to return to the gate and he had to wait another hour because cabin staff had exceeded their working hours limit. "It was so frustrating. I was sitting there, unable to do any work because we couldn't use our laptops. We just sat and waited," he said.

Kristano Reinhart, an Indonesian working in Shanghai, said there was a lack of guidance for passengers over delays.

"You waste so much time being stuck at the airport not knowing what to do," said Reinhart, who last month experienced a nine-hour delay flying from Hong Kong to Shanghai.

A crew member at Dragonair said she expected delays when flying to and from Shanghai. Her colleagues had also had delays of up to nine hours, she said.

"It's so confusing and frustrating," she said. "Mentally it's tiring, and stressful because the passengers might be very angry."

Delays have even caused violence. On a Hong Kong Airlines flight to Beijing last month, six mainland tourists were charged with attacking crew members after a six-hour delay. When a Hong Kong Airlines flight to Shanghai was cancelled last June, more than 70 passengers refused to leave the aircraft for 18 hours.

Bonnie Zhang Siqi, 26, who travels domestically two to five times a month, was once delayed for five hours by bad weather on a flight from Huangshan , in Anhui province, to Beijing.

Mainland flights carried 390 million passengers last year, 10 per cent more than in 2013.

Pilot Charles Cao's worst delay was eight hours at Xiamen Gaoqi International Airport.

Cao, who works for a mainland airline, said most delays occurred in southeast China because the region had more flights.

Because the PLA controls most of China's airspace, military activities also cause delays. Two Beijing airports will be closed for three hours on September 3 for a military parade commemorating the end of the second world war.

To streamline air traffic, authorities announced in April plans to establish 10 new routes serving Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, and to negotiate with the military to create new ones.


 

ElectricLightOrchestra

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Loyal

Flight delays in China must be honestly explained


PUBLISHED : Sunday, 02 August, 2015, 12:17am
UPDATED : Sunday, 02 August, 2015, 12:17am

SCMP Editorial

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Flight and passenger numbers are rapidly rising, leading to the prospect of longer delays. Photo: Dickson Lee

The long delays and cancellations of mainland flights lead to understandable frustration and from time-to-time, unacceptable unruliness. The six mainlanders arrested at Hong Kong International Airport last week for bad behaviour while waiting for their plane to leave for Beijing were not going to get to their destination any sooner; as it is, they ended up in court with four being jailed for assault. But their antics revealed a gap between comprehension of the situation and reality. China's air routes have become so congested that a single event can throw schedules into disarray.

Transparency becomes important at such a time - airlines and authorities have to honestly explain delays. There is an added dimension with the People's Liberation Army controlling much of the nation's airspace. The 225 passengers on Hong Kong Airlines Flight 305 were told their 8.10pm departure was not able to take off on schedule due to "adverse weather and air traffic control in Beijing". Six hours later, with no further explanation being given, trouble broke out among those not satisfied with what they had been told; the plane eventually took off for the three-hour trip at 4.45am, 8 ½ hours late.

Mainland flights involving the most popular destinations, Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Hong Kong, can often be delayed by a few hours. FlightStats, a US company that tracks global air travel, has determined that Chinese airports and airlines were the worst in the world for being on time last year. Among the 61 largest airports, the seven worst performers for on-time departures were all on the mainland, being Hangzhou's Xiaoshan at the bottom, followed by Shanghai's Hongqiao and Pudong, Shenzhen's Baoan, Guangzhou's Baiyun, Chongqing and Beijing Capital International.

Flight and passenger numbers are rapidly rising, leading to the prospect of longer delays. Airlines' record number of new plane deliveries and orders will only worsen the congestion and planned airports will not alleviate the problem. The solution lies in the PLA freeing up airspace, in new routes and better air traffic management, particularly by hiring more controllers.

Authorities in April announced plans for 10 new air passages covering Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. Negotiations with the military will begin to create more routes. But such changes take time to implement and years could pass before delays are substantially reduced. In the meantime, passengers have to be tolerant and a better effort has to be made to explain delays.


 
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