AIR passenger traffic halved in May from a year earlier as the coronavirus pandemic hampered travel in the country although the pace of decline slowed from the previous month, showing the industry is on track for a gradual recovery. Air passengers numbered 25.83 million in May, down 52.6 percent year on year, Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) spokesman Xiong Jie told an online news conference yesterday. That compared with a 68.5 percent year-on-year decline in April, when passengers numbered 16.72 million. In the first five days in June, the average daily numbers of passengers and flights rose to 57.4 percent and 66.11 percent of levels seen last year, respectively, with load factors nearing 70 percent, the CAAC said Saturday. The encouraging signs bode well for the global tourism industry, which is closely watching Chinese travel patterns as countries follow China’s lead in reopening their economies. China is also relaxing its coronavirus-related curbs on international flights, allowing some foreign airlines that are currently barred from operating flights to China one flight a week into the country from June 8. Some of the carriers preparing to resume flights to China have requested all passengers take a nucleic acid test for the coronavirus before boarding the plane, Xiong said. The CAAC has said it would suspend airlines from services if five or more passengers on a flight tested positive upon arrival. Xiong said the regulator is still in talks with other countries on the matter and is expected that the number of international flights would increase in the near future. “In the next step, we will continue to restore some international passenger flights in a steady and orderly way ... to further meet the demand from overseas Chinese wishing to return home,” he said. (SD-Agencies) |