PLAN SCS Bases/Islands/Vessels (Not a Strategy Page)

uminatsu

Just Hatched
Registered Member
Don't believe that airport code has been officially assigned by IATA or ICAO.

Does that mean more civilian flights took place on different days or that initial testing involved more than one aircraft on the same day?

Looks like two aircrafts landed on the same day (Jan 6th)

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weig2000

Captain
Larger ones

751812_1452087631.jpg


751812_1452087773.jpg


751812_1452087885.jpg

Looking at these pictures, I'm still having difficulty believing what I see: is this real? Did it really happen?

In a span merely two years, a modern runway able to land B737 on is built in the middle of an ocean where there were only some rocks. And China is building three of them simultaneously!
 
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ahojunk

Senior Member
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China Daily, January 7, 2016

YongShu.永暑岛.2016-01-06e_china.daily_plane.landing.jpg
A Chinese aircraft lands on the newly constructed runway at Yongshu Jiao in China's Nansha Islands during a test flight on Wednesday.

China successfully carried out test flights of two commercial airliners on Wednesday at a newly built airfield in the Nansha Islands in the South China Sea.

The airfield will provide more routes for flights over the South China Sea, according to a government media release.

Insiders, who declined to be named, said the test flights were different from the one reported on Saturday. That flight aimed to test communication between the planes and the airfield, while Wednesday's were "real test flights".

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying confirmed on Saturday that China had finished building an airfield on Yongshu Jiao in China's Nansha Islands. It is the most southerly airfield in the country.

She said Saturday's test flight was intended to check whether the runway met civilian aviation standards.

Xinhua News Agency reported that two civilian aircraft departed from Haikou in Hainan province on Wednesday morning and landed on Yongshu Jiao after flights of nearly two hours. They returned to Haikou in the afternoon.

The official media release by Xinhua said, "The test flights proved that the airfield has the capacity to ensure safe operation of large civilian aircraft."

This will help with the transportation of goods and personnel as well as with healthcare on the islands, it said, adding that the airfield will also serve as an alternate one for flights in the region.

Pan Wei, chief engineer at China Rescue and Salvage under the Ministry of Transport, said the airfield will significantly cut travel time between the Nansha Islands and the Chinese mainland.

Pan said the airfield will help to ensure flight and navigational safety for airplanes and ships in the area and greatly improve the ability of marine salvagers.

As a responsible country, China will continue to promote the building of emergency response and rescue facilities, Pan said.

It will shoulder the international obligations of search and rescue operations, marine environmental protection, disaster prevention, and navigational safety in the South China Sea.

Nearly 40 percent of global trade is carried through the South China Sea, which sees the passage of at least 40,000 ships annually.

Vietnam and the Philippines have protested over the new airfield's completion. But Hua said on Saturday the test flight that day was completed "completely within China's sovereignty".
 
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