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Monday, September 18, 2017

Chinese air passengers could soon be allowed to use smartphones and tablets during flights

(SCMP) China's aviation authority will relax its rules on using mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets during flights, allowing individual airlines to decide on their own rules.

The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) announced a fifth revision to government aviation regulations on Monday, paving the way for airlines to make their own assessments on the use of portable electronic devices (PEDs) – which are currently prohibited on Chinese airlines.

The regulatory body has also developed an approval process for the airlines' assessments.

"I believe that in the near future, you will see China's airline companies allowing the use of relevant portable electronic devices," Zhu Tao, deputy director of the CAAC, told reporters.

The aviation rules were revised for the fourth time in April last year, and existing rules bar passengers from switching on or operating PEDs during flights.

Banned devices included mobile phones, walkie-talkies and remote control toys.

Some devices such as laptops cannot be used during take-off or landing, according to the existing regulations.

The impending change was heralded by Chinese passengers and observers alike.

"This is a welcome step to improve the competitiveness of Chinese airlines, both against international carriers and domestically against high-speed rail," said Will Horton, a Hong Kong-based analyst at the Centre for Aviation, an aviation market intelligence firm.

One Beijing-based pilot wrote on Weibo that China's airlines "should have kept up with the times long ago."

Another user based in Beijing commented: "This is really just too great."

Many airlines around the world, such as Hong Kong's flagship carrier Cathay Pacific, allow the use of smaller electronic devices, including smartphones and tablets.

In 2013, both the US and European Union's aviation regulatory bodies changed their policies to relax regulations barring the use of electronic devices on flights.

Individual airlines in the US are free to use discretion in making their own PED policies, such as requiring smartphones to be placed in "airplane" mode, or a non-cellular transmitting mode. All the country's major carriers allow some usage of electronic devices.

In addition to relaxing rules on electronic devices, the changes are also designed to improve safety with measures that include addressing airline crew members' fatigue risks and qualifications as well as improving management training.

Other changes include an extended age limit for pilots, reduced flight time for cabin crew members and new fuel policies.

All carriers will need to implement these new changes by the end of 2019.

Source: South China Morning Post by Sarah Zheng


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