Passenger flights in China cross 10,000 mark
The number of Chinese passenger flights on Friday reached 10,262, exceeding the mark of 10,000 on a single day for the first time since February, according to the country's top aviation regulator.
China has so far restored about 60 percent of its passenger flight capability prior to the novel coronavirus pandemic, said Civil Aviation Administration of China on Saturday.
Due to the outbreak, both the passenger and the flight volume witnessed a staggering decline since Jan 23, it said, adding that the flight volume hit rock bottom at 3,931 on Feb 13, only 23 percent of the normal volume before the pandemic.
As the outbreak has leveled off across the country, coupled with the country's supportive policies, civil aviation sector has gradually recovered since late February. The number of average daily flight rose to 6,538 in March, 6,950 in April and 8,900 in May.
- It's all yours up in the air — for a pretty penny
- Tibet sees over 50,000 air passengers during May Day holiday
- 121m passenger trips seen during May Day holiday
- China details measures to improve business environment in civil aviation sector
- Aerolíneas Argentinas operates maiden flights to China and secures medical equipment
- Taiwan tea maker seeks mainland ties at cross-Strait expo
- Major progress reported in water conservation in Xizang
- China dominates list of world's top 10 science cities
- Former vice-governor of Yunnan province sentenced over bribery offences
- AI, robotics dominate China's emergency management expo
- Safety violations lead to four deaths at Xinjiang steel plant
































