http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2010-07/22/content_11033933.htm


China's rich flying high in private jets
By Xin Dingding (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-07-22 07:34


BEIJING - Flight delays, traffic jams and the need for privacy have led China's 
super rich to travel by private planes, though space and flight restrictions 
can still make it difficult for them to take off.

Insiders warned the restrictions could put a damper on the demand for private 
planes, while the desire for more convenient transport may drive this class of 
traveler to resort to the use of charter flight services.


Private aircraft manufacturers and dealers agreed that China and other Asian 
countries are becoming increasingly important markets, as their traditional 
customers in the United States and Europe continue to struggle with economic 
recovery.
 
The most optimistic forecast so far, made by Hong Kong's Asia Jet CEO Mike 
Walsh, was that China would surpass the US in terms of possessing the largest 
number of private planes in the world. The US currently has 200,000 private 
planes.

Other industry insiders disagreed with the forecast and projected an annual 
growth of 20 percent as a more rational estimate.

"Only when the current difficult approval procedures are removed can the demand 
for private aircraft ownership achieve explosive growth," said Yang Xiaonong, 
one of China's earliest private plane consultants who has sold more than a 
dozen private planes since the 1990s.

Due to the complicated procedures, only 30 private planes are registered with 
the civil aviation authorities, he estimated.

Many other private planes have no "legal identity" and are flown stealthily, 
without reporting their flight plans to air traffic controllers.

Earlier this year, civil aviation authorities in Zhejiang province detected 
three illegal plane flights, whose owners were punished.

The difficulty of meeting all three requirements - a pilot license, a 
registered plane and approval of the flight plan by air traffic control - has 
placed most private plane owners in a dilemma.

Yang said one of his customers, who owns hotels in Dongguan, Guangdong 
province, can only fly from his hotels to nearby beaches.

Only a small number of corporate users regularly use their business jets by 
paying professional companies millions of yuan each year to handle the 
logistics.

"But the limited number of airports in the country and other restrictions will 
always impede growth," Yang said.

Meng Pengjun, chairman of Shenzhen-based Asia-Pacific Business Aviation Company 
Ltd, said that since there are a limited number of people who can afford their 
own planes, private jet charter services are likely to become lucrative in 
China.

Related readings:
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 Residences of the rich and famous
 Second generation of the rich to receive lessons in life

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