Air passengers will soon be able to log in to Internet

China Eastern Airlines has become the first Chinese carrier to provide Wi-Fi services on both domestic and international flights.
The carrier got approval from the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology to use AsiaSat-6 satellite for Wi-Fi services on its 21 aircraft from June 5. The inflight Wi-Fi services are expected to be launched in a month as the carrier still needs to complete some formalities.
China Eastern said it plans to offer inflight Wi-Fi services in its Airbus 330 and Boeing 777-300ER aircraft, which are all widebody aircraft used on long-haul routes. It is also the first time that the ministry has given Wi-Fi approval for such a large fleet.
Passengers use WiFi services to surf Internet on mobile gadgets on a flight of China Eastern Airlines. Liu Xin / For China Daily |
The satellite technology used by China Eastern enables it to reach most intercontinental routes, which is also a first for Chinese carriers, industry sources say.
China Eastern plans to make its entire fleet Wi-Fi enabled by 2017 or 2018, and plans to use the in-flight services for commercialization, the company says.
From this year, all new aircraft that will be delivered to China Eastern will be equipped with Wi-Fi, while installation in other aircraft will be made gradually, says Zeng Yongchao, deputy general manager of China Eastern's marketing department.
Other Chinese airlines are also waiting for approvals from the ministry, sources say.
Statistics from the Civil Aviation Administration of China show that about 390 million domestic passengers took flights in 2014 and they spent about 1 billion hours in the air during the whole year.
"The commercial aviation industry has to pay attention to meet the demands of passengers, giving them the freedom to stay connected whenever and wherever they want," says Jack Jacobs, vice-president of Honeywell Aerospace's marketing and product management, one of the world's main aviation systems providers.
A Honeywell survey in the United States confirmed that consumers are accustomed to easy access to Wi-Fi, and they expect the services to be fast and consistent like at home or work, says Jacobs.
"Those expectations are now expanding into the sky."
Before the approval from the ministry, Chinese carriers such as Air China, Hainan Airlines and China Eastern had already conducted Wi-Fi tests on some flights. The data collected from such flights were used for the policymaking process, say sources.
The next stage for the carriers is commercialization of the new service.
Air China has set up a special office for in-flight Wi-Fi services, while China Eastern is looking to build a subsidiary company for e-commerce this year.
The new company will be responsible for the carrier's online businesses, including in-flight Wi-Fi.
"The in-flight Wi-Fi service could bring some new business opportunities, especially in social media and data services," says Zou Jianjun, a professor at the Civil Aviation Management Institute of China.
wangwen@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily Africa Weekly 06/05/2015 page20)
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