User blogs
Tag Search
Shanghai Pudong Airport Initiates Phase-4 Expansion
During Phase-4 of the expansion project, an additional terminal building will be constructed to meet the airport’s rising passenger demands. The new T3 terminal is expected to serve 50 million passengers each year, allowing 130 million annual passengers to travel through Pudong airport by 2030.To get more shanghai airport latest news, you can visit shine news official website.
The terminal will span across 1.19 million square metres and will feature twin terminal buildings, with nearly 100 aircraft stands for international and domestic flights.A new 1.03 million-square-metre transport centre will also be connected to the terminal to allow travellers to conveniently transfer to and from public transport. The Airport Express Line, Metro lines 2 and 21, and the Shanghai East Railway Station will all be linked with the new terminal to provide efficient transport links.
This fourth phase of the expansion project follows the completion of Phase-3 in 2019, which included the world’s largest satellite terminal, covering 620,000 square metres.The city-wide lockdown in Shanghai, initially expected to end today, has been extended indefinitely amid a rise in COVID-19 cases, causing further disruptions to cargo operations at Shanghai Pudong International Airport (PVG) and Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport (SHA). As containment attempts persist for the latest COVID-19 outbreak persist, the city’s testing campaign also continues. “At […]
Shanghai's Pudong and Hongqiao airports have received 26 charter flights with medical teams from seven provinces and cities – here to assist in the city's fight against COVID-19.
The first charter flight from central China's Henan Province landed at Hongqiao airport at 2:46pm on Sunday, greeted by airport controllers waiting on the tarmac.
Other charter flights landed at the two airports through midnight on Sunday, the Shanghai Airport Authority said.
More than 20,000 medics from across China have arrived in Shanghai to help in the treatment of the surging number of COVID-19 infections and conduct citywide nucleic acid testing on Monday.
With most airport staff under lockdown, the airport authority dispatched a 23-member emergency support team from Pudong airport to Hongqiao airport, which handled most of the charter flights of domestic medical teams.
After the landing of each aircraft, all the staffers on the tarmac had to rush to help unload the luggage, which included vital medical supplies.
The mobile stairs and trailers were disinfected. Coaches drove to the tarmac to pick up the medics and take them to their accommodations directly.
The assisting medical teams, including polymerase chain reaction (PCR) sample collection personnel, are primarily from neighboring Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Anhui provinces, as well as Tianjin City, central Hubei and eastern Jiangxi provinces.
Many of them are collecting PCR samples and assisting patient treatments at 10 local designated and makeshift hospitals.
In Shanghai, covid is revealing cracks in the authoritarian system
China’s draconian approach to the coronavirus outbreak in Shanghai is moving beyond just a public health emergency. It is also becoming a challenge to Chinese leader Xi Jinping and the Communist Party’s long-standing claim that its authoritarian system is the key to stability and prosperity.To get more news about covid19 in shanghai, you can visit shine news official website.
After the 2019 outbreak in Wuhan, China adopted a policy of “zero-covid,” rigidly confining those who tested positive, often not at home but in separate quarantine facilities. Locking up the virus seemed to work for nearly two years. Residents chafed, but the approach kept infections low, at least by China’s untrustworthy data. Also helping: closed borders and protection provided by China’s vaccines. However, this year the highly transmissible omicron variant overpowered the strategy. The virus raced through Jilin City, Hong Kong and elsewhere, then hit Shanghai, China’s most prosperous and largest metropolis, and parts of Beijing, too. China’s population was vulnerable because of a relatively low vaccination rate among the elderly, the diminished effectiveness of the Chinese vaccine against omicron, and omicron’s greater transmissibility, which made it harder to bottle up.
Initially, the plan in Shanghai was to smother the virus fast with a two-part city lockdown. That failed and was abandoned. The authorities then shut tight the entire metropolis of 25 million, saying it would be for just a few days. Six weeks later, it remains in place — and thousands of daily new cases are still being reported. Although the totals are declining, it is still not zero. What’s more, the lockdown has created a severe disruption to global supply chains. Public patience is exhausted, and faith in the party’s ability to govern has eroded. There have been scenes of food rotting in piles while people nearby were hungry, a person stuffed into a body bag while still alive and nightly protests, with people banging pots from balconies.
China’s leaders have boasted for the past two years that their authoritarian methods were capable of ensuring stability and prosperity far better than the chaotic pandemic response in the United States. The party’s basic claim to legitimacy — since it does not rest on democratic choice — is that it knows best and is effective and competent. The Shanghai mess has fueled doubts. On the defensive, Mr. Xi chaired a meeting of the Politburo’s Standing Committee on May 5, after which he vowed to stick with the zero-covid approach and also demanded that no one question or dissent. New Shanghai lockdowns were imposed Monday.
Will the outbreak shake the Chinese leadership? A test will be whether Mr. Xi can promote Li Qiang, Shanghai’s Community Party chief and a close ally of his for decades, to the Standing Committee. Mr. Xi is expected to secure a third five-year term at a party congress in November, and to elevate his pal Mr. Li at the same time. That might be jeopardized if the Shanghai crisis is not resolved soon. Yet China does not have easy alternatives. It would be wise to import mRNA vaccines and vaccinate the elderly. But a study just released in the journal Nature, based on modeling, suggests that if the lockdowns are dropped and omicron runs wild, it could lead to 1.55 million deaths.