Cross-Indochina
route not a matter of right or wrong: Vietnam minister
The testing
of a direct air route over three Indochinese countries is not meant
to determine whether supporters of the idea or its opponents are right, but
to serve the interests of airlines and passengers, Vietnam’s transport
minister Dinh La Thang said Wednesday.
The Ministry of Transport has assigned the Civil
Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV) and two carriers, Vietnam Airlines and
VietJet Air, to test what is known as the ‘golden air route’ between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City
through the airspace of Laos
and Cambodia.
The two carriers completed flight simulations on the
route last week, and the CAAV also finished testing earlier this week.
At the Wednesday meeting to report its results, the
CAAV said a simulated flight on the cross-Indochina route was 85km shorter
than the current one, and helped save five minutes of flying time, as well as
190kg of fuel.
The results are similar to those achieved by national
flag carrier Vietnam Airlines.
Minister of Transport Thang said he could not believe
that the proposed route shortened the travel time by only five minutes,
though he admitted that “a minute saved is precious enough.”
The minister asked the CAAV to continue cooperating
with relevant agencies in studying the proposed route to implement it in an
efficient way.
Thang also said he will work with his Lao and Cambodian
counterparts on the issue.
He emphasized that the study of the cross-Indochina air
route is not meant to prove that some individuals are right, while others are
wrong.
“Anything that is beneficial and economical for
airlines and passengers must be done,” he said.
The controversial ‘golden air route’ was first proposed
by a retired pilot in Ho Chi Minh
City in 2009, and again by an aviation expert in
2012.
The idea received strong opposition from industry
insiders and experts, while enjoying support from the Vietnamese transport
ministry and the CAAV.
The transport ministry said the route had previously
been discussed among the Indochinese countries back in the 1980s.
Minister Thang requested that the CAAV report a final
conclusion on the route by the end of October.
Five minutes, 190kg of fuel
CAAV chief Lai Xuan Thanh said the provisional air
route faces three challenges.
Vietnam first has
to call on Lao aviation authorities to allow flights to reach flight level
(FL) 350, or 10.6km, to save more fuel. The current allowed FLs in Laos range
from 240 to 280 (7.3-8.55km), Thanh said.
Vietnam also has to
reorganize its airspace so that planes plying the proposed route will not
have to avoid currently restricted zones.
“Finally, we have to negotiate with Laos and Cambodia to reduce the fees for
using their airspace,” he said.
Dinh Viet Thang, general director of the Vietnam Air
Traffic Management Corporation, said geometrically speaking, the straight
route between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City is much shorter than the
current one.
“But a flight path depends on the takeoff and landing
methods at each airport, as well as the altitude changing during flight, so
the distance is only shortened by 85km,” he said.
Thang added that as the air traffic control ability of Laos is limited, Vietnam
should only open a one-way route from Ho Chi Minh City
to Hanoi,
crossing Lao and Cambodian airspace.
“And the Hanoi-Ho
Chi Minh
City service will use
the current air route,” he said.
Vietnamese airlines currently fly between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City
on a ‘roundabout’ route that spans a sea area between the capital and Da Nang in the central region, and crosses over the
mainland between Da Nang
and the southern city.
Map of the
straight air route between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.
Source: CAAV
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