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Air China

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Air China
中国国际航空公司
Zhōngguó Guójì Hángkōng Gōngsī
IATA
CA
ICAO
CCA
Callsign
AIR CHINA
Founded 1988
Hubs Beijing Capital Int'l Airport
Focus cities / secondary hubs Chongqing Jiangbei Int'l Airport
Chengdu Shuangliu Int'l Airport
Frequent flyer program Companion
Member lounge VIP Lounge
Alliance Star Alliance (Observer Status)
Fleet size 198
Destinations 183
Parent company China National Aviation Holding Company
Headquarters Beijing, People's Republic of China
Key people Ma Xulun (President)
Li Jiaxiang (Chairman)
Website: http://www.airchina.com.cn
Not to be confused with China Airlines.

Air China (SEHK: 0753) (LSE: AIRC) (Chinese: 中国国际航空公司, Pinyin: Zhōngguó Guójì Hángkōng Gōngsī, literally "Chinese International Aviation Company", abbreviated 国航) is the People's Republic of China's state owned and second-largest commercial airline and is based in Beijing. It is the flag carrier and the only airline to fly the PRC national flag on its entire fleet. Its logo is a phoenix in the form of the abbreviation VIP. Its main base is Beijing Capital International Airport.

Contents

[edit] History

Air China was established and started operations on 1 July 1988. Formerly the Beijing-based international carrier division of Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC), it was renamed in 1988, when the government decided to split the operating divisions of CAAC into separate airlines, each with its own name. Further deregulation of the aviation business took place in 1994, enabling foreign investment in airports and facilitating the import of aircraft built outside mainland China. By 1996 the country had 108 airports with scheduled airline services and around 30 different airlines. On 28 October 2002, Air China consolidated with China National Aviation Corporation and China Southwest Airlines.

Air China's Airbus A340 taking off from Beijing Capital International Airport (Dec 2004)
Enlarge
Air China's Airbus A340 taking off from Beijing Capital International Airport (Dec 2004)

During 2004 as part of a consolidation of the Chinese aviation industry Air China absorbed Zhejiang Airlines (a subsidiary of CNAC). On 15 December 2004 the company listed its shares on the Hong Kong and London Stock Exchanges. Air China has shareholdings in Air China Cargo (51%), Air Macau (51%) and also holds majority shares of Shandong Airlines.

In March 2005, Air China was in talks with Swire Group, the largest shareholder of Cathay Pacific, for merger talks with Air China acquiring Cathay Pacific, and Cathay Pacific acquiring a majority stake of Dragonair. In return, the Swire Group would become the largest individual shareholder of Air China's parent company. Both airlines subsequently announced that the airlines will not merge completely in the foreseeable future, and Swire expressed its commitment in remaining as the largest shareholder of Cathay Pacific. It was also announced that Air China would cooperate with Cathay Pacific by codesharing flights in the late 2005, and would partner with Asia Miles in the second-half of 2005.

As of January 2005, Air China is owned by China National Aviation Holding Company (CNAH)(69%), public floatation (21%) and Cathay Pacific (10%). On May 22, 2006, Air China signed an agreement with Lufthansa and was officially invited to join Star Alliance, a rival airline alliance of Oneworld of which Cathay Pacific is a member. A few days later on June 9, 2006, a joint announcement revealed a new shareholding structure in which Air China will acquire a 17.5% stake in Cathay Pacific, while the latter will own 20% of the former.

[edit] Incidents and accidents

  • On 13 March 2005, the right main gear wheels of an Air China Boeing 747-400 at LAX, sank deeply into asphalt at the edge of the taxiway as it turned on to runway 25R for take-off. The aircraft was immobilized and the runway had to be closed for 13 hours before the aircraft could be pulled free (ref: Flight International, July 2005).

[edit] Destinations

Further information: Air China destinations

[edit] Codeshare Partners

As of August 2006, Air China had code-share agreements with these airlines:

[edit] Fleet

Air China's fleet includes the following aircraft (as of 11 2006):

Type Number Seats[1] Routes Notes
Airbus A319-100 29
(8 on order)
Airbus A320-200 6
Airbus A321-200 (24 on order)
Airbus A330-200 5
(17 on order)
Airbus A340-300 6
Boeing 737-300 40 167 (8/120)
Boeing 737-600 6
Boeing 737-700 20
Boeing 737-800 26
(10 on order)
167 (8/159)
Boeing 747-20F 4
Boeing 747-40F 5
Boeing 747-400 4 406 (18/40/348)
Boeing 747-400Combi 8 307 (18/40/249)
Boeing 757-200 13
Boeing 767-200ER 5
Boeing 767-300 4 225 (10/26/189)
Boeing 767-300ER 5
Boeing 777-200 10 345 (49/296)
Boeing 787-8 [2] (15 on order)
Gulfstream IV 1
Learjet 1

As of May 2006, Air China's average fleet age is 8.4 years old.

Air China signed agreements with :

  • Airbus, on June 2006, for the purchase of 24 A320s. These aircraft are to be delivered between 2007 and 2010.

While Boeing's Orders page for 2006 reflects this order, there have been no formal news/press releases indicating the following:

  • Boeing, on January 17 2006, for the purchase of 10 Boeing 737-800 aircraft for delivery from end 2007 to end 2008.

[edit] Former Fleet

A couple of Lockheed Hercules aircraft superseded Antonov 12s in the freighter role. Four British Aerospace 146 "Whisperjet" passenger aircraft were returned to the United Kingdom during 2003.|-

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Air China. Seat Maps. Air China. Retrieved on 2006-12-08.
  2. ^ Flight International, 3-9 October 2006

[edit] External links


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  Members of the Star Alliance
Air CanadaAir New ZealandANAAsiana AirlinesAustrian Airlinesbmi
LOT Polish AirlinesLufthansaScandinavian AirlinesSingapore AirlinesSouth African Airways
SpanairSwissTAP PortugalThai AirwaysUnited AirlinesUS AirwaysVarig

Regional members: Adria AirwaysBlue1Croatia Airlines
Future members: Air ChinaShanghai AirlinesTurkish Airlines
Former members: Ansett AustraliaMexicana

See also: List of companies in the People's Republic of China

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