Eyes Manila-Shanghai route soon
By Cliff Harvey C. Venzon
April 18, 2013
By Cliff Harvey C. Venzon
April 18, 2013
SHANGHAI-BASED China Eastern Airlines Corp. has bagged a temporary
permit to operate in the Philippines, an official of the Civil
Aeronautics Board (CAB) said in a recent phone interview.
“We gave them the TOP (Temporary Operating Permit) last Thursday. It
is good for one year,” CAB Executive Director Carmelo L. Arcilla said on
Monday when asked about the status of the application the carrier filed
in February.
“It (TOP) is as good as the FACP (Foreign Air Carriers Permit), it’s
just that they (China Eastern) need to complete some documentation.”
An FACP is a permit given to foreign airlines to enable them to
operate in the country. Like the Certificate of Public Convenience and
Necessity, which is issued to local airlines, FACP is renewable every
five years.
Mr. Arcilla, however, noted that China Eastern still needs to get a
“technical permit” from the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines
(CAAP) and an “airport slot” so that it could start operations.
Officials of China Eastern, which eyes operations in Manila, were not immediately available for comment.
Jose Angel A. Honrado, general manager of the Manila International
Airport Authority, said in a telephone interview yesterday that he has
not seen the carrier’s application for an slot at the Ninoy Aquino
International Airport (NAIA).
“I have not seen their application. But the slot for peak hours is
already full,” he said, referring to 7 a.m.-7 p.m. “They have to get
flight schedule beyond those hours.”
A check with the CAAP’s Flight Operation Division showed that China Eastern has not applied for any permit.
If the carrier gets the CAAP permit and airport slot, China Eastern
will join other China-based carriers already operating in the
Philippines namely: Air China Ltd. and China Southern Airlines Co. Ltd.
China Eastern started operations in 1957, according to the company’s Web site.
In 1997, it became the first Chinese airline listed simultaneously in New York, Hong Kong and Shanghai stock markets, it added.
As one of the three major airlines in mainland China, it operates in 50 overseas and 11 domestic hubs, the Web site showed.
The company also “holds controlling shares of over 24 subsidiaries
including Shanghai Airlines, China Eastern Yunnan Airlines, China Cargo
Airlines Co. Ltd and China United Airlines,” it said.
The company, which has “a fleet of more than 400 long-haul and
short-haul aircraft with an average age of less than seven years,”
serves “nearly 70 million travelers annually.”
Including the Chinese carriers, 39 foreign airlines were operating in
the Philippine as of end-2012, CAB records showed. International
passenger volume went up by 6.83% to 16.74 million last year from 15.67
million the year before, according to CAB records.
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