Korea-China air flights set to rise with Beijing’s eased zero-COVID policy

The reopening of borders is an opportunity for Korea’s full-service and budget carriers to recover from the pandemic slowdown

Aircraft of Korean Air and Asiana
Aircraft of Korean Air and Asiana
Seo-woo Jang 3
2022-12-22 17:38:55 suwu@hankyung.com
Airlines

Air flights between South Korea and China are set to rise significantly next year with the Chinese government issuing new guidelines easing its strict zero-COVID-19 policy, including relaxed travel restrictions.

According to Korea’s transport ministry and industry officials on Thursday, the aviation authorities of the two countries have agreed to increase the number of weekly flights between their major cities by 16 to 50.

Given that the flights are round-trip, a total of 100 airplanes will be flying weekly on major China-Korea routes.

At the height of the pandemic, such flights had plummeted to as low as three times a week from the pre-pandemic level of 500. As COVID infections spread quickly across China, its government imposed a strict “one airline, one route” policy for foreign carriers.

With its economy worsening faster than expected, however, the Chinese government earlier this month announced new guidelines, relaxing test requirements and travel restrictions.

The guidelines represent a significant shift from the strict policy that China has maintained for the past three years, which involved quashing outbreaks through mass testing, stringent lockdowns and border closures.

A COVID-19 testing center sign at a Korean airport
A COVID-19 testing center sign at a Korean airport

POSSIBLE LIFT OF HALLYU BAN

Together with the eased rules, recent indications that Beijing might ease its ban on Korean pop culture and dramas, collectively known as Hallyu or Korean Wave, will likely help the Korean aviation industry recover from the doldrums, industry officials said.

Korean airline companies – full-service carriers and budget carriers alike – are adding new routes and resuming international flights with the reopening of borders.

Korean Air Lines Co., the country’s flag carrier, is gearing up for a full recovery of its seven routes from Incheon to Chinese cities – Tianjin, Guangzhou, Shenyang, Dalian, Shanghai (Pudong), Nanjing and Qingdao.

Korean Air (KAL) said it recently increased its flights to Shenyang and Tianjin to twice a week from just once earlier.

KAL’s crosstown rival Asiana Airlines Inc., which operates routes from Incheon to Shanghai, Shenzhen, Hangzhou, Chengdu, Changchun, Beijing, Nanjing and Harbin, said it is considering further increasing its flights to China’s major cities.

Korean low-cost carriers' desks at Incheon International Airport
Korean low-cost carriers' desks at Incheon International Airport

BUDGET AIRLINES ALSO RESUME FLIGHTS

Korea’s low-cost carriers (LCCs), including Jeju Air Co., T’Way Co., Jin Air Co. and Air Busan Co. – also plan to increase their flights to China.

Jeju Air has raised its Chinese route flights to four times a week. While flights on its Incheon-Weihai route were increased to twice a week, the company resumed its flights to the Chinese cities of Yanji and Harbin.

Jin Air, the budget airline unit of Korean Air, is currently running the Jeju-Xian route exclusively.

Air Busan, which operates the Incheon-Qingdao and the Busan-Qingdao routes, is widely expected to resume its Busan-Yanji route early next year, industry watchers said.

T’Way flies from the southern Korean city of Daegu to China’s Shenyang, Wuhan and Yanji.

China accounts for about a fifth of Korean budget carriers’ sales revenue, industry data showed.

Those airlines, which mainly focus on short- to medium-haul flights, generate about 80% of their sales on routes from Korea’s neighboring countries, including China.

Write to Seo-woo Jang at suwu@hankyung.com
In-Soo Nam edited this article.

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