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Mainland's Association for Relations
Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) President Chen Yunlin(L) and
Taiwan-based Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) Chairman Chiang Pin-kung
attend the symposia on finance in Taipei, southeast China's Taiwan
Province Nov. 5, 2008. They attended two symposia, one on industry and
shipping and the other on finance, that were held against the backdrop of
international financial crisis and struggling world economy in Taipei on
Wednesday. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- Agreements on direct
flights and shipping, signed on Tuesday in Taipei, are drawing strong interest
from airlines and shipping companies from the mainland and Taiwan.
"Regular charter flights, instead of flights only
weekends and festivals, were our long-term expectations," said Liu Shaoyong, the
general manager of mainland-based China Southern Airlines. "Direct air routes
are very good for our business."
A flight from the mainland to Taiwan via Hong Kong
under the current arrangement takes two hours and 42 minutes and burns 16 tonnes
of fuel. Under the new arrangement, flights will take 69 minutes and burn 7.3
tonnes of fuel.
"Less travel time and expense benefits both
passengers and airlines," Liu said.
Wei Hsing-Hsiung, chairman of the board of
Taiwan-based China Airlines, was glad to see the number of passenger charter
flights increase from 36 on weekends to 108 a week.
"We have profits of about 1.5 million U.S. dollars
from weekend charter flights. The figure is likely to reach 5 million dollars
due to more flights, while the cost might fall by 20 percent as the route is
shorter," he said.
The new agreement only opened one direct air route,
between Shanghai and Taipei. Xiamen, the coastal city in southeastern Fujian
Province directly opposite to Taiwan, was not included.
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Mainland's Association for Relations
Across the Taiwan Straits (ARATS) President Chen Yunlin(R) and
Taiwan-based Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF) Chairman Chiang Pin-kung
attend the symposia on industry and shipping in Taipei, southeast China's
Taiwan Province, Nov. 5, 2008. They attended two symposia, one on industry
and shipping and the other on finance, that were held against the backdrop
of international financial crisis and struggling world economy in Taipei
on Wednesday.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
"We are expecting more air routes," said Yang
Guanghua, general manager of Xiamen Airlines.
The flight distance between Xiamen and Taipei will be
one third shorter than at present and the flying time will be about half, he
said.
The two sides said in the agreement that they are
going to negotiate another route linking the southern part of Taiwan with the
mainland.
To cope with increasing flights, Yang's company plans
to use 10more passenger planes next year, he said.
Taiwan's senior economic official Shih Yen-shiang
told the local daily China Times on Wednesday that he estimated every direct
trip across the Strait could save companies 300,000 New Taiwan dollars (about
9,000 U.S. dollars).
"Based on 4,000 trips a year, 1.2 billion dollars
will be saved," he said.
Under the new agreement, the mainland and Taiwan will
exempt each other's shipping firms from business and income taxes.
For the container divisions of Taiwan's three leading
shipping lines -- Evergreen Marine, Wan Hai Lines and Yang Ming Group --
60percent could be related to the mainland. Tax cuts will save each 2 to 3
billion NT dollars, another local newspaper, the Commercial Times, said.
Ningbo of eastern Zhejiang Province was one of the 63
ports that the mainland opened to Taiwan ships.
"The most direct effect will be increasing cargo
volume," said Tong Mengda, chief economist of Ningbo Port Holding. "The voyage
to Taiwan has been cut from 25 hours to ten. This is good for both shipping
companies and ports."