·í¦~¤µ¤é¡RChinese authorities grant 5th freedom of the air

[2016.05.23] µoªí
Singapore Airlines Cargo, a subsidiary of Singapore Airlines, became the first third-country freighter airline to fly direct between China and the United States.
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¡i©ú³ø±M°T¡jOn 22 May 2003 Singapore Airlines Cargo (·s¥[©Y¯èªÅ³f¹B¤½¥q) became the first third-country freighter airline to fly direct between China and the United States. That marked the first time that the Chinese authorities had granted the fifth freedom of the air (²Ä¤­¯èÅv) to an airline (¯èªÅ¤½¥q).

The fifth freedom in perspective

The fifth freedom of the air is complicated but of immense economic benefits (¸gÀٮįq). A Singaporean airline might, for example, want to operate a flight route from Singapore to New York via Nanjing. A bilateral agreement (ÂùÃä¨ó©w) has to be reached between the Chinese and Singaporean governments so as to allow the airline to drop off passengers and unload cargoes in China. This will greatly enhance the viability (¦s¬¡¯à¤O) of the airline - it will be able to carry on board not only passengers coming from Singapore but also those from Nanjing. The airplane can also carry Nanjing-bound passengers who get on board in Singapore if agreements concerning the third and fourth freedoms of the air have been signed between the countries.

The fifth freedom of air also works the other way round. For example, a flight route from Singapore intended by the same airline might carry Singapore-bound ¡V as well as Nanjing-bound - passengers who get on board in New York.

Implications for Mainland China and HK

In recent years the Chinese government has stepped up its effort in liberalising its aviation policy. In January 2015, for example, a Bangkok-bound airliner operated by Ural Airlines (¯Q©Ôº¸¯èªÅ¤½¥q), which is based in Russia, departed from Yekaterinburg (¸­¥d±¶µY³ù) and touched down at Harbin Taiping International Airport («¢º¸Àؤӥ­°ê»Ú¾÷³õ). It was the first time that the fifth freedom of the air had been granted in northeast China (¤¤°êªF¥_). Analysts believe that all this poses a challenge to the status of Hong Kong International Airport.

¡»The freedoms of the air

The freedoms of the air are a set of commercial aviation rights that grant a country's airlines the privilege to enter and land in another country's airspace. There are altogether nine freedoms of the air as follows:(¹Ï)

1st freedom of the air (»âªÅ­¸¶VÅv):

the right to fly over foreign territory(A) without landing.

2nd freedom of the air (§Þ³N¸g°±Åv):

the right to refuel or carry out maintenance in a foreign country(A)for non-traffic purposes.

3rd freedom of the air (¥Øªº¦a¤U«ÈÅv):

the right to fly from one's own country to another.

4th freedom of the air (¥Øªº¦a¤W«ÈÅv):

the right to fly from another country to one's own.

5th freedom of the air (¤¤¶¡ÂIÅv©Î©µ»·Åv):

the right to fly between two foreign countries on a flight that begins or ends in one's own country.

6th freedom of the air (¾ô¼ÙÅv):

the right to fly from a foreign country to another while stopping in one's own country for non-technical reasons.

7th freedom of the air (§¹¥þ²Ä¤T°ê¹B¿éÅv):

the right to fly between two foreign countries while not offering flights to one's own country.

8th freedom of the air (³sÄòªº°ê¤º¹B¿éÅv):

the right to fly inside a foreign country, continuing to one's own country.

9th freedom of the air («D³sÄòªº°ê¤º¹B¿éÅv):

the right to fly inside a foreign country without continuing to one's own country.

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