Private airlines rise to State-owned challenge By Cao Desheng (China Daily) Updated: 2006-01-05 06:11
The expansion of private airlines has put pressure on
their State-owned competitors. Proof of this is not only in a shift in market
share, but also several instances of managerial and pilot headhunting.
Planes of flag
carrier Air China at Beijing airport. China's fledgling private airline
industry could take off in the first half of this year, using busy holiday
travel seasons to launch their services, state media said. [AFP] |
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A latest example is Li Kun, former deputy general manager of State-owned
China Southern Airlines. He left his company, where he had worked for 27 years,
two weeks ago to become the general manager of Shenzhen Airlines, the biggest
private carrier in China.
Although the Guangzhou-based airline company refused to comment on Li's
departure, aviation analyst Wang Yongsheng said he would have been attracted by
the private airline's capital volume, profit margins and promise of personal
development.
Li is the first senior manager to make the switch, and his move has sent
ripples through the industry.
Also last month, 10 captains from the Jiangsu Branch of China Eastern
Airlines asked to resign, something that had never happened before private
airlines took off.
"While helping break the previously-monopolized civil aviation market,
private airlines also provide more opportunities for pilots and managers," said
a professor from the Civil Aviation Management Institute of China surnamed Liu.
Despite small fleet sizes most of them have just one or two leased or
purchased aircraft private investors hold high hopes for profits.
Fourteen private carriers were given approval to operate by the General
Administration of Civil Aviation of China (CAAC) last year.
Shanghai-based private carrier Spring Airlines transported more than 75,000
passengers between July and October on 436 flights with just one Airbus320. The
occupation rate reached 95 per cent, according to company President Wang
Zhenghua.
East Star Airlines, one of the companies established five months ago in
Shanghai, has signed an agreement for leasing and buying 20 Airbus aircraft.
Tianjin-based Okay Airways, which made the "maiden voyage" for a private
airline, said it would watch for cargo transportation opportunities.
(China Daily 01/05/2006 page2)
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