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Foreign pilots on the horizon for Air China By Cao Desheng (China Daily) Updated: 2006-02-14 06:13
Foreign pilots are to be brought in by the nation's flagship carrier to meet
the demand of its expanding air fleets.
Air China said it was planning an overseas recruitment drive because it was
suffering a severe shortage of pilots.
"Air China has planned to introduce 20 to 30 airplanes within this year, but
the exact number will depend on the supply of aircrew members, particularly the
pilots," said Li Huxiao, a senior staff from the Beijing-based airline company.
"Currently, we are short of at least 40 captains, so we will try to recruit
foreign pilots," Li said.
He gave no details about the exact number of foreign pilots his company
planned to recruit.
Air China's problems reflect the fact China's booming commercial aviation
industry is taking off faster than the country can train pilots.
According to statistics from the General Administration of Civil Aviation of
China (CAAC), the industry regulator, about 11,000 pilots are employed to fly
more than 770 aircraft operated by the major Chinese commercial airlines a
figure industry experts say is inadequate to cope with rocketing demand for
passenger services.
The Civil Aviation Flight University of China, the nation's major training
school for commercial airline pilots based in Sichuan and Henan provinces,
graduates a maximum of 600 pilots a year.
Based on the delivery of new aircraft, industry experts estimate that China
has needed between 1,200 and 1,600 new pilots every year since 2000.
To the major State-owned airlines such as Air China, China Southern Airlines
and China Eastern Airlines, another increasing challenge is the expansion of
private carriers in the country, as pilot headhunting frequently occurred to the
companies from last year.
Ten captains from the Jiangsu Branch of China Eastern Airlines asked to
resign in December, something that had never happened before the growth of
private airlines.
In the context of the rapid growth of civil aviation industry, the shortage
of pilots, particularly captains, is a serious problem, said Hao Yuping, deputy
senior director of Air China.
(China Daily 02/14/2006 page2)
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