Flight delays are a pain, no matter how you look at it. But
while being annoyed over frequent flight delays used to be synonymous with US airtravel,
this has now alarmingly spread across Asia. Or, to be more precise, China and
Hong Kong. On a recent 9.20am flight from Chek Lap Kok to JFK, all looked
promising with the plane parked at gate 4, which, as the pilot happily
announced as we finished boarding, would ensure a quick taxi to the runway.
Half an hour later, our pilot, now a little less happy, announced that pushback
would be delayed due to the airport being 'very busy'. When we finally pushed
back and headed to the runway, almost an hour after schedule, there were still
13 planes in front of us in the take off queue, which meant another 20 minutes
before we were finally airborne. While this type of delay is particularly
annoying when you have a 16 hour flight ahead of you, it is even a greater inconvenience
when the delay represents almost half the scheduled flying time of a 3 hour
intra-regional flight. Unfortunately this type of delay has become a reality
for far too many flights in and out of Hong Kong.
Will a new runway solve the delays?
With close to 60 million in passenger traffic in 2013, Hong
Kong's airport is certainly bursting at the seams, which is the type of evidence usually brought
forward by people who are in favour of building a third runway at Chek Lap Kok,
something that is hotly debated right now. If only it was so easy. "Hong
Kong on a sunny day can just cope," a pilot friend of mine I questioned
about the delay situation told me. "A few drops of rain though and the
delays start," he said. I asked him whether he thought a third runway
would ease the pain but he thinks not. "It's not the lack of runways
that's the problem. It's the lack of airspace." So in other words, unless
you somehow have a magic wand that enables you to build more airspace to handle
the increased plane movements a third runway would bring, the situation will
not improve.
Bring on the Big Planes
A much better way of coping with the overstretched airport could
be to reduce the flight frequency by forcing airlines to use bigger planes to
fly with less frequency. For example, Cathay Pacific currently flies eight non-stop
flights a day to Singapore, typically all on 777's or A330's. While this is
very convenient for frequent travelers there (like me), the same load could be
achieved with flying, say, four times a day with A380s. It's less convenient,
sure, but if the pay-off is schedule frequency versus increasingly annoying
delays, I think I'd opt for the former - being able to rely on a schedule is
far more valuable than being at the mercy of unpredictable delays. There would
have to be some sort of regulation that the Airport Authority and (ultimately)
the government would have to impose for airlines to comply though. But knowing
how difficult it is to get any legislation approved in Hong Kong, I won't hold
my breath.
The secret of airtavel in China: Stoicism
Of course, if you are a frequent flier to or within China,
this will seem like peanuts to you. Delays within China are frequent and
unpredictable, mainly due to the Chinese government (and the PLA) closing
airspace on a whim, for anything from VIP flights to military exercises. On a
recent trip to Shanghai, my flight got cancelled. My flight back was 30 minutes
late and the flight scheduled before mine and after both got
Inner calm: Marcus Aurelius, famous stoic philosopher |
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