Airlines from home and abroad are flocking to resume international routes in October amid surging demand and a more relaxed travel policy.
China Southern Airlines said on Friday it plans to increase international routes from 71 flights per week to 86 in October, with more flights on routes such as Guangzhou to Jakarta and Dalian to Tokyo.
The Guangzhou-Dubai route will increase to three round-trips per week from October 27; the Guangzhou-Bangkok route will have one round-trip per week from October 24; and the Guangzhou-Phnom Penh route will be increased to one round-trip per week from October 18, the company said in a press release sent to the Global Times.
Hainan Airlines said that it will fly 10 international routes from October 30, including flights from Beijing to Brussels, Moscow and Belgrade, and from Chongqing to Rome and Madrid. At the same time, the frequency of Chongqing-Rome international flights will be increased to twice a week.
Foreign airlines are also busy returning to China. Etihad Airways, the national airline of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), launched its first-ever scheduled flights linking Abu Dhabi and Guangzhou on Tuesday. The flight touched down at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport, making it the first international airline to operate long-haul passenger services to the top three Chinese gateways - Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou - since the start of the pandemic, the company told the Global Times.
Scoot said on Friday that it has resumed flights to seven cities in Chinese mainland - Guangzhou, Tianjin, Nanjing, Fuzhou, Hangzhou, Zhengzhou and Wuhan - to further strengthen the aviation ties between China and Singapore.
Singapore Airlines restarted passenger flights between Chengdu and Singapore on Tuesday.