Airlines to raise fares to counter fuel costs By Cao Zhe (China Daily) Updated: 2005-07-27 06:03
Domestic flights are expected to become a bit more expensive after industry
regulators yesterday told airlines they could collect surcharges on tickets as
fuel prices rise worldwide.
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Passengers descend from a jetliner belonging
to China's first budget airline - Spring Airline in Yantai, East China's
Shandong Province, July 18, 2005.
[newsphoto] | Carriers will be allowed to
reintroduce fuel surcharges on internal routes from next month until the end of
the year, according to a document jointly released by the General Administration
of Civil Aviation of China (CAAC) and the National Development and Reform
Commission.
Passengers will have to pay an additional 20 yuan (US$2.46) if they fly less
than 800 kilometres or 40 yuan (US$4.93) if they fly 800 kilometres or more.
CAAC says that in the first five months of this year, revenue lost by
domestic airlines totalled 340 million yuan (US$41.9 million).
The increase in operating costs as a result of surging fuel prices amounted
to 3.54 billion yuan (US$436 million) over the same period.
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