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Wikipedia

China Southern Airlines

China Southern Airlines (branded as China Southern) is a major airline in China, headquartered in Guangzhou, Guangdong. It is one of the three major airlines in the country, along with Air China and China Eastern Airlines.

China Southern Airlines
IATA ICAO Callsign
CZ CSN CHINA SOUTHERN
Founded1 July 1988; 35 years ago (1988-07-01)
Hubs
Secondary hubs
Focus cities
Frequent-flyer programSky Pearl Club
Subsidiaries
Fleet size662
Destinations237[1]
Parent companyChina Southern Air Holding
Traded as
  • SSE: 600029 (A share)
  • SEHK: 1055 (H share)
HeadquartersGuangzhou, Guangdong
Key peopleTan Wangeng (Vice Chairman & President)
Revenue CN¥127.806 billion (2017)[2]
Operating income CN¥8.798 billion (2017)[2]
Net income CN¥9.156 billion (2017)[2]
Total assets CN¥149.14 billion (2017)[2]
Total equity CN¥62.543 billion (2017)[2]
Employees100,000 (2015–2016)[3]
Websitewww.csair.com/en (in English)
www.csair.com (in Chinese)
China Southern Airlines
Simplified Chinese中国南方航空
Traditional Chinese中國南方航空
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhōngguó Nánfāng Hángkōng
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingzung1gwok3 naam4fong1 hong4hung1
China Southern Airlines Company Limited
Simplified Chinese中国南方航空股份公司
Traditional Chinese中國南方航空股份公司
Literal meaningChina Southern Airlines, Company Limited by Shares
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinZhōngguó Nánfāng Hángkōng Gǔfèn gōngsī
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingzung1gwok3 naam4fong1 hong4hung1 gu2fan6*2 jau5haan6 gung1si1
Second alternative Chinese name
Chinese南方航空
Literal meaningSouthern Airlines
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinNánfāng Hángkōng
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingnaam4fong1 hong4hung1
Third alternative Chinese name
Chinese南航
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinNánháng
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingnaam4 hong4

Established on 1 July 1988 following the restructuring of CAAC Airlines that acquired and merged a number of domestic airlines, the airline became the world's sixth-largest airline measured by passengers carried and Asia's largest airline in fleet size, revenue, and passengers carried. With its main hubs at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport and Beijing Daxing International Airport, the airline operates more than 2,000 flights to more than 200 destinations daily and was a member of SkyTeam until 1 January 2019. The airline started a frequent flyer program partnership with American Airlines in March 2019. The logo of the airline consists of a kapok flower (which is also the city flower of Guangzhou) on a blue tail fin.[4] The company slogan is Fly towards your dreams (飞向您的梦想).

The parent company of China Southern Airlines Company Limited is China Southern Air Holding Company, a state-owned enterprise that is supervised by the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council.

History and development edit

Founding edit

In 1984, the Chinese government disclosed the decision to decentralize the CAAC. Formed in 1949, CAAC was an all-encompassing organisation responsible for civil aviation in China as it was tasked with passenger transport, resource development and survey work, air traffic control, aircraft maintenance and personnel training. The decentralisation decision would result in numerous regional airlines, with four main carriers to be responsible for the majority of international and domestic air traffic: Air China, China Southern Airlines, China Eastern Airlines and China Southwest Airlines; CAAC itself would be rationalised into a regulatory and administrative organisation.[5]

In 1988, CAAC granted its seven regional divisions, among which was the Guangzhou Regional Administration, limited operating autonomy with the status of "associate" airlines. China Southern Airlines began flying under its own name and livery in February 1991. At this time, the aircraft operated some 160 flights a day on 100 routes using the Antonov An-24, Boeing 737 and Boeing 757, along with helicopters and agricultural aircraft.[6][7][8] In December 1992, the airline placed a US$800-million order for six Boeing 777s and the associated spare parts and training.[9]

The airline completed its decentralisation from CAAC when it gained independence on 10 October 1993. As such, the airline could from then on restructure itself into shareholding enterprises, independently arrange external financing and establish subsidiaries to complement its core enterprise.[10] During the airline's early years, the carrier was the dominant domestic carrier. Together with the two major airlines of China – Air China and China Eastern – the airline handled half of passenger traffic carried by all Chinese carriers. Owing to Air China's status as the country's flag carrier, the airline is entitled to extensive international service rights, with China Eastern and China Southern's international networks confined to mainly East Asia and within Asia, respectively. Like other Chinese carriers, China Southern was subjected to CAAC's exclusive right to grant operating rights for every prospective route as well as to regulate domestic prices.[11]

Expansion edit

To raise its operating standards and distance itself from mostly unprofitable second and third tiers domestic airlines, the carrier signed agreements with a number of foreign carriers regarding staff training and aircraft maintenance, with the ultimate aim of being listed on the New York Stock Exchange, possibly as soon as early 1995.[12]

Starting in the mid-1990s, China Southern sought to expand its international reach beyond Asia. In December 1995, the Chinese and US governments signed an aviation agreement that would allow the commencement of non-stop air services between the two countries.[13] After having been granted the right to establish services to Amsterdam in early 1996, the airline started Guangzhou–Beijing–Amsterdam, its first long-haul route, in November 1996. The following year, the carrier commenced non-stop trans-Pacific services to Los Angeles, as well as services to Brisbane.[14]

The start of European and American services coincided with the arrival of the long-range Boeing 777s, the first of which was delivered in late December 1995, as well as a general expansion and upgrade of the carrier's fleet and the associated facilities. Due to engine certification and labor relations issues, the delivery of the first Boeing 777 was more than a month behind schedule. As a result, the carrier considered, but ultimately decided against, leasing the Boeing 747-400, which would have been used to cover anticipated delays as well as to launch trans-Pacific services to the US.[15][16][17][18] Nevertheless, the airline planned to double its fleet of 67 aircraft. In April 1996, the Chinese government would place an order, on China Southern's behalf, for 10 Airbus A320s; the delivery of the first aircraft, and China Southern's first Airbus, was made the following year.[19][20] Guangzhou Aircraft Maintenance Engineering Company, which was jointly established with Lockheed Aircraft Services International and Hutchinson Whampoa, was carrying out expansion of its aircraft maintenance facilities in anticipation of the increase.[21]

To keep pace with fast developments, China Southern raised capital, becoming listed on the Hong Kong and New York Stock Exchanges in July 1997, and raising $600–$700 million. Much of the funds raised were used to facilitate the airline's fleet expansion, repayment of debt, and investments in other capital;[22] it followed up with domestic listing in 2003 at the Shanghai Stock Exchange.[23] By 1997, the airline, along with its joint-venture airlines Xiamen Airlines, Shantou Airlinesm and Guangxi Airlines, was carrying some 15 million passengers per year using about 90 aircraft, operating about 270 routes among 68 destinations and almost 2,450 flights per week. The airline group's revenue totalled some US$1.4 billion with a net income of $90 million.[24][25]

Mergers and acquisitions edit

The end of the 1990s was a period of consolidation for the Chinese airline industry. Initially, China Southern looked to acquire several smaller non-profitable domestic carriers as it sought to highlight its expansion plans in an effort to raise funds; among the deals was the purchase of 60% shares of Guizhou Airlines.[26][27] Due to the weakening economy amidst the 1997 Asian financial crisis and intense competition among the some 30 Chinese carriers, in 1998, CAAC considered a comprehensive restructuring of the industry that would see the consolidation of the airlines into three or five carrier groups.[28][29] At one stage, it was reported that CAAC was contemplating a forced merger of Air China and China Southern. Given the latter's dual listing in Hong Kong and New York, it was thought that such a merger would have eased Air China's path towards its own share offering. China Southern confirmed that such talks between them were occurring, although they ultimately proved fruitless. Had the merger proceeded, their combined fleets would have numbered some 250 aircraft, which would have made the resultant airline the largest in Asia.[30][31][32]

Although there was considerable resistance to CAAC's call to rationalise the industry, in July 2000, the administrative body announced that the ten airlines under its direct management will be merged into three airline groups, revolving around Air China, China Eastern Airlines and China Southern itself.[28] Within a month, China Southern had started absorbing Zhengzhou-based Zhongyuan Airlines, which at the time operated five Boeing 737s and two Xian Y-7 turboprops.[33] The carrier would later merge with Shenyang-based China Northern Airlines and Urumqi-based Xinjiang Airlines to form China Southern Air Holding Co., a process that took more than two years and would culminate in China Southern's acquisition of their US$2 billion's worth of assets (as well as $1.8 billion of debt) in November 2004. Consequently, China Southern's fleet expanded from some 140 aircraft to over 210. The takeovers meant that the carrier became the main airline at Shenyang and Ürümqi, with passenger numbers' jumping from 28.2 million in 2004 to 44.1 million in 2005.[34] As a result, China Southern Airlines became one of the "Big Three" carriers in the country. Since then, it has successively taken over shareholding stocks and joined the equity in numerous Chinese carriers. The airline is the major shareholder of Xiamen Airlines (55%) and Chongqing Airlines (60%); it also invests in Sichuan Airlines (39%).[35]

Amidst the major consolidation of the airline industry, China Southern in April 2000 started dedicated cargo services from Shenzhen using a Boeing 747-200F (which was quickly upgraded to the Boeing 747-400F) wet-leased from Atlas Air. To capitalise on the economic growth of the Pearl River Delta region (which includes Hong Kong), the carrier constructed a dedicated cargo centre in Shenzhen.[36] Successful operations prompted an order for two Boeing 747-400Fs the following year.[37] The airline by now had commenced operations to Sydney and Melbourne.[38]

In September 2003, China Southern signed a purchase agreement for four Airbus A330-200s, to be delivered from 2005. This was part of the order placed in April by the China Aviation Supplies Imp. & Exp. Group covering 30 aircraft.[39] China Southern became the first mainland Chinese A330 operator with the delivery of the first example February 2005.[40] China Southern followed up in September 2005 with a further order for eight A330-300s and two A330-200s.[41]

The month of January 2005 proved to be significant for civil aviation in China in general and China Southern in particular. In preparation for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China Southern and the Chinese government placed several landmark widebody-aircraft orders from Airbus and Boeing. More specifically, on 28 January 2005, the carrier became the first (and so far the only) Chinese carrier to commit to the Airbus A380 double-deck aircraft, when it signed a general-terms agreement for five examples worth US$1.4 billion at catalogue prices.[42][43] On the same day, China Southern, along with five other domestic carriers, placed a bulk order for 60 Boeing 7E7s (later renamed the Boeing 787 Dreamliner). The aircraft were worth $7.2 billion at list prices, and the first example was expected to be delivered in time for the Olympics;[44] however, the first aircraft did not arrive until June 2013.[45]

Earlier during the month, the CAAC had approved the temporary operations of charter flights between mainland China and Taiwan. On the same day as the widebody orders, a China Southern Airlines Boeing 777–200 took off from Guangzhou and landed in Taipei the following day, becoming the first mainland Chinese aircraft to land in the Republic of China since 1949, when the Kuomintang were involved in Chinese Civil War with the Chinese Communist Party. The flight carried 242 passengers home after the Lunar New Year. Previously, passengers travelling between the mainland and Taiwan had to transit through a third port such as Hong Kong or Macau.[46][47] Within three years, in July 2008, a China Southern Airlines Airbus A330 carrying 230 tourists[48] again landed in Taipei.[49] The governments of China and Taiwan had both agreed to allow direct flights across the Taiwan Strait in June, ending six decades of limited air travel between the two sides. Following the flight, China Southern Airlines Chairman and pilot of the flight, Liu Shaoyong, said, "From today onward, regular commercial flights will replace the rumbling warplanes over the skies of the Taiwan Strait, and relations between the two sides will become better and better."[48][49]

Following two years of negotiations which had started in August 2004, China Southern in late June 2006 signed an agreement with SkyTeam, one of the three global airline alliances, formally pledging itself to the improvement of standards with the aim of its eventual joining. According to the agreement, the airline committed to the upgrade of handling services, facilities and training of at least 75% of its staff to SkyTeam's standards.[50][51] On 15 November 2007, China Southern officially joined SkyTeam, becoming the eleventh carrier to join the grouping and the first mainland Chinese carrier to join an airline alliance. The welcoming ceremony was attended by high-ranking Chinese government and SkyTeam corporate officials and was held at the Great Hall of the People.[52] The carrier's integration with the alliance continued with its entry into SkyTeam Cargo in November 2010,[53] and its joint-venture carrier Xiamen Airlines' formal joining in November 2012. With China Eastern's ascension in June 2011, SkyTeam furthered its leading presence on the mainland Chinese market; the remaining Big Three carrier, Air China, is a member of Star Alliance.[54][55]

It followed up with another Airbus order on 7 July 2006, when it confirmed a deal covering the purchase of 50 more A320 narrow bodies for delivery from 2009.[56] The order included 13 A319-100s, 20 A320-200s and 17 A321-200s, reportedly worth $3.3 billion at list price.[57] In December 2005, China Southern Airlines along with CASGC, announced an order with Boeing for 9 Boeing 737-700s and 11 Boeing 737-800s.

In June 2006, China Southern Airlines confirmed another order of 3 Boeing 737-700s and 7 Boeing 737-800s. The deliveries would continue through 2010.[58] On 18 October 2006, China Southern Airlines placed an order for 6 Boeing 777 freighters, striding forward a brand new step in its cargo development.[59] The aircraft would be delivered from November 2008 to July 2010.

On 20 August 2007, China Southern Airlines announced its intention for an order of 25 Boeing 737-700s and 30 Boeing 737-800s, which will be delivered from May 2011 to October 2013.[60] It was a mere two months before, on 23 October 2007, China Southern Airlines announced that it had placed an order for 10 additional Airbus A330-200s. The order has a listed price of US$1.677 billion and the aircraft will be delivered from March 2010 to August 2012.[61]

 
China Southern Airlines office in Melbourne

Recent developments edit

During 2009, China Southern Airlines remodeled its strategy from a point to point hub to a full hub and spoke carrier, which has been proven successful. Along with that, the airline has rapidly expanded its international market share, particularly in Australia, where passenger numbers in 2011 have been 97% greater than in 2010.[62]

On 21 January 2010, China Southern Airlines announced an order for an additional 20 A320-200s, scheduled for delivery from 2011, due to the falling fuel costs and surging passenger demand.[63] In March 2010, the Chinese carrier issued new shares in Hong Kong and Shanghai 2010 to raise 10.75 billion yuan ($1.57 billion) in a bid to pay off outstanding loans.[64] In December, CNY810 million ($121.5 million) was injected by China Southern Airlines into its subsidiary Xiamen Airlines to fund its fleet expansion.[65] In November 2010, China Southern Airlines signed an agreement with Airbus for the purchase of six A330s and 30 A320s–200.[66]

On 11 January 2011, China Southern Airlines announced a lease for 10 Embraer E-190, set to be delivered from the second half of 2011. On 27 January 2011, China Southern Airlines was awarded a four-star ranking by Skytrax. It is the largest airline to hold this title.[67] On 17 October 2011, China Southern Airlines made its first flight with the Airbus A380. Initially, the airline deployed the A380s on domestic routes, flying between Guangzhou, Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong. At the same time, the carrier conducted negotiations to commence A380 international services. Due to the government-imposed limitation which confined an international route to a single airline, China Southern in August 2012 announced its intention to initiate Beijing-Paris services in cooperation with Air China, pending government approval. Two months later, the A380 was deployed on Guangzhou-Los Angeles services.[68] Early A380 operations were unprofitable and the aircraft, underutilised; services to Sydney were thus launched in October 2013.[69] By May 2013, talks with Air China on Beijing-Paris services had ceased.[70]

While China Southern, like the other Big Three[specify] Chinese carriers, had been expanding rapidly since 2000, much of their activities had been focused on the domestic market.[71] With the increase in outflow of Chinese tourists, who in 2012 for example spent $102 billion internationally,[72] as well as the rapid construction and introduction of high-speed rail in China, the carrier shifted its outlook overseas in order to sustain growth.[71] Owing to the location of its hub at Guangzhou, which hinders the airline effectively serving the North American market, the airline concentrated its international expansion on Australasia. In June 2012, with the inauguration of services from Guangzhou to London-Heathrow, the airline started marketing its services connecting Europe and Australia as the "Canton Route",[73][74] an alternative to the Kangaroo Route flown by carriers such as Qantas. It hoped to attract the predominantly business traffic that travel between Europe and Australia, and channel such sixth-freedom traffic as well as traffic from mainland China through its Guangzhou hub (thereby transforming the carrier's network from one that emphasises point-to-point to a hub-and-spoke system).[75][76] The carrier by now had added cities such as Auckland, Istanbul, Perth, and Vancouver to its route map.[73][77][78]

During May–June 2012, China Southern Airlines has recruited Dutch flight attendants to serve the First and Business class sections for flights from Guangzhou to Amsterdam.[79]

On 7 June 2013, China Southern Airlines began operating its first Boeing 787.[citation needed]

In early 2015 it was announced that the airline would lease 24 Airbus A320neo aircraft from AerCap for delivery between 2016 and 2019.[80]

On 15 November 2018, the airline announced that it would leave SkyTeam by 1 January 2019 and will strengthen its partnership with American Airlines and others.[81] The announcement lead to speculation that it will join Oneworld alongside Hong Kong carrier Cathay Pacific. Various media outlets reported that while analysts predict that its Oneworld move could threaten Cathay Pacific's position in the alliance, other analysts states that China Southern joining Oneworld would benefit Cathay more due to different target markets.[82]

In March 2019, the airline announced a frequent flyer partnership with American Airlines.[83] Currently, the airline plans for more flexible tie-ups with other carriers, mostly with Oneworld members such as Qatar Airways while not joining the alliance 'for a few years' in order to fulfill its dream as 'world's largest airline'.[84] On 26 September 2019, China Southern operates at Beijing Daxing International Airport alongside its former and current partners, and all of its flights to and from Beijing are transferred to Daxing on 25 October 2020.

In November 2022, China Southern scheduled their last Airbus A380 flights prior to their planned retirement.[citation needed]

Corporate affairs edit

Business trends edit

The key trends for the China Southern Airlines Group are (as of the financial year ending December 31):

2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
Revenue (RMB b) 99.5 98.5 108 111 114 127 143 154 92.5 101 87
Net profit (RMB b) 3.7 2.7 2.3 4.8 5.8 6.8 3.3 3.0 −11.8 −11.0 −33.7
Number of employees 73,668 80,175 82,132 82,132 93,132 100,831 100,831 103,876 100,431 98,098 97,899
Number of passengers (m) 86.4 91.7 100 109 114 126 139 151 96.8 98.5 62.6
Passenger load factor (%) 79.9 79.4 79.4 80.5 80.5 82.2 82.4 82.8 71.4 71.2 66.3
Fleet size 491 561 612 667 702 754 840 862 867 878 894
References [85] [86] [87] [88] [89] [90] [91] [92] [93] [94] [95]

Ownership structure edit

[96] Owner Number of shares held Percentage of shares held
1 China Southern Airlines Group Co., Ltd. 9404468936 51.9
2 Nanlong Holdings Limited 2612124036 14.41
3 Hong Kong Securities Clearing Company Limited (Agent) 1750815837 9.66
4 Hong Kong Securities Clearing Company Limited 654597606 3.61
5 China Securities Finance Corporation Limited 320484148 1.77
6 American Airlines 270606272 1.49
7 China Aviation Oil Holding Company Limited 261685354 1.44
8 Spring Airlines Co., Ltd. 140043961 0.77
9 China State-Owned Enterprise Structural Adjustment Fund Co., Ltd. 72077475 0.4
10 GF Ruiyi Leading Mixed Securities Investment Fund 70644579 0.39

Cooperation with American Airlines edit

American Airlines invested $200 million in China Southern Airlines in March 2017, laying a strong foundation for a long-term relationship between two of the world's largest airlines. After the investment, American Airlines holds a 2.7% equity stake in China Southern Airlines. [97]American Airlines and China Southern are two of the world's largest airlines with complementary networks, offering customers unparalleled destinations in both the business and leisure traveler markets. The two airlines have signed codeshare and interline agreements to provide travelers with flights to more destinations in China, North and South America. The codeshare route partnership includes the ability to earn and redeem AAdvantage miles, check baggage through, and book tickets.[98]

 
The China Southern Air Building, the company headquarters located in Guangzhou.

Head office edit

China Southern is headquartered in the China Southern Air Building at 68 Qixin Road (齐心路) in Baiyun District, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province.[99][non-primary source needed]

It was previously at 278 Jichang (Airport) Road (机场路) in Baiyun District.[100][101][102]

China Southern had plans to open a new headquarters facility on a 988-acre (400 ha) site on the outskirts of Guangzhou, about 4 miles (6.4 km) from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport. Woods Bagot won a competition for the architect firm which would design the facility. The proposed site consists of two parcels of land on opposite sides of a highway leading to Baiyun Airport; both sites are shaped like wings. The site will have a bridge and light rail system that operates above the highway to connect the two parcels, which will each have distinct functions. For instance, the east parcel will house internal functions such as the data center facilities, staff dormitories, and the training center. The airline wants it to be aesthetically pleasing from the air since it sits below a runway approach. The site will have a lot of outdoor space, which Woods Bagot designed along with Hargreaves Associates and Sherwood Design Engineers. Jean Weng, a Woods Bagot Beijing-based principal, said "Most Chinese cities are very dense and very urban, but China Southern wants to create a human-scale campus, that's close to nature."[103] The new headquarters was opened in August 2016.[citation needed]

Destinations edit

Overview edit

China Southern Airlines serves 193 destinations in 35 countries worldwide.[104] It maintains a strong presence in the domestic market with its main hubs at Beijing Daxing International Airport and Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport with secondary hubs at Shanghai Pudong International Airport, Chongqing Jiangbei International Airport, and Ürümqi Diwopu International Airport, along with other focus cities in Changchun, Changsha, Dalian, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Wuhan, and Zhengzhou. The airline plans to continue to develop Chongqing and Ürümqi as hubs as well to exploit the domestic market potential.[105]

China Southern offers 485 flights a day from its Guangzhou hub and 221 from its Beijing hub.[62] The airline provides services to 65 international destinations. Most of the international flights link Guangzhou with world cities. There are also plenty of international flights operated through Beijing, Shanghai, Ürümqi (notably to Central Asia and Middle-east) and Dalian (to Japan, South Korea, and Russia). China Southern Airlines has developed an extensive network to Southeast Asia and also has become the Chinese airline with the largest presence in Australia.[106][non-primary source needed] China Southern is also considering expanding into the South American markets, as well as further expansion into the African market.[74][non-primary source needed]

Alliance edit

On 28 August 2004, China Southern Airlines signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the airline alliance SkyTeam. On 15 November 2007, the airline was officially welcomed as the 11th member of SkyTeam, becoming the first mainland Chinese airline to join any global airline alliance,[107] expanding the alliance's presence on mainland China.

On 24 December 2018, China Southern Airlines released an official statement saying that it would discontinue its SkyTeam membership on 1 January 2019 and will also terminate its partnership with China Eastern Airlines and Delta Air Lines.[108][non-primary source needed]

Codeshare agreements edit

China Southern Airlines codeshares with the following airlines:[109][110]

Fleet edit

Current fleet edit

 
A China Southern Airlines Airbus A330-200 on short final to Amsterdam Airport Schiphol in 2011
 
A China Southern Airlines Airbus A350-900 landing at Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport in 2019
 
A China Southern Airlines Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner arrives at Heathrow Airport (2015)

As of December 2023, China Southern Airlines operates the following aircraft:[119][120]

China Southern Airlines Passenger Fleet
Aircraft In service Orders Passengers[121] Notes
B E+ E Total
Airbus A319-100 9 4 18 108 130[122]
Airbus A319neo 4 5[123] 4 24 108 136[124] Launch customer.[125]
Airbus A320-200 100 8 24 120 152
4 18 138 160
24 166
Airbus A320neo 50 17[123] 4 24 138 166
Airbus A321-200 97 12 24 143 179
4 18 167 189
24 195
Airbus A321neo 60 60[123] 4 24 167 195
12 18 172 200
Airbus A330-200 5 18 244 262
12 24 242 278
Airbus A330-300 26 30 253 283
28 258 286
Airbus A350-900 20 28 24 262 314 [123]
Boeing 737-700 19 4 18 106 128[126]
24 134[127]
Boeing 737-800 160 8 24 132 164
4 24 150 178
18 147 169
150 172
Boeing 737 MAX 8 27 41[citation needed] 4 24 150 178 [128]
Boeing 777-300ER 15 1[citation needed] 28 28 305 361[129]
Boeing 787-8 10 18 248 266
Boeing 787-9 17 28 28 220 276 3 orders were transferred to XiamenAir.[130]
269 297
Comac ARJ21-700 26 9[131] 90 90
Comac C919 1 4[citation needed] TBA Deliveries started mid-2023.[132]
China Southern Cargo Fleet
Boeing 777F 17 Cargo
Total 662 138

Cargo edit

 
A China Southern Cargo Boeing 777F landing at Frankfurt Airport in 2010.

China Southern Cargo is the cargo subsidiary of China Southern Airlines. The cargo airline provides services between mainland China and North America, Europe, and Australia, where destinations such as Amsterdam, Anchorage, Chicago, Frankfurt, Los Angeles, Vancouver, Vienna, and London Stansted are served from its main hub at Shanghai Pudong International Airport, with cargo flights to Amsterdam and Milan from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport.[citation needed]

The cargo subsidiary joined the SkyTeam Cargo alliance in November 2010 and withdrew on 1 January 2019 following the airline's withdrawal from SkyTeam.[133]

Former fleet edit

 
A former China Southern Cargo Boeing 747-400F
 
A former China Southern Xian Y-7 at Beijing Civil Aviation Museum

China Southern Airlines previously operated the following aircraft[134]

China Southern Airlines Retired Fleet
Aircraft Number Introduced Retired Notes/Refs
Airbus A300-600R 6 2004 2011
Airbus A300-600RF 1 2004 2011
Airbus A380-800 5 2011 2022 Last scheduled flights on 6 November 2022.[135]
ATR 72-500 5 2004 2011
Boeing 737-200 10 1988 2006
Boeing 737-300 36 1991 2015 Three aircraft are stored.
After retired, most aircraft were converted into freighters.[136]
Boeing 737-300QC 2 2003 2005 After retired, most aircraft were converted into freighters.
Disposed to China Postal Airlines.
Boeing 737-500 12 1991 2009 Disposed to Aerolíneas Argentinas.
Boeing 747-400F 2 2002 2022 Disposed to SF Airlines.[137]
Boeing 757-200 32 1987 2018 After retired, most aircraft were converted into freighters.
Boeing 767-300ER 6 1992 1998
Boeing 777-200 10 1995 2018
Boeing 777-200ER 6 1997 2014 Three aircraft are stored.
Embraer ERJ-145 6 2004 2013
Embraer E190 20 2011 2021[138]
McDonnell Douglas MD-82 23 2003 2008 The last one left in 2010.[139]
McDonnell Douglas MD-90-30 13 2004 2011 Disposed to Delta Air Lines.
Saab 340 4 1992 1997 Disposed to Shandong Airlines.[140]
Short 360 3 Un­known 1994 One aircraft scrapped in 2002.
Remainder disposed to Servicios Aéreos Profesionales.[141]
Xian Y-7 Un­known Un­known Un­known

Airbus A380 edit

 
A former China Southern Airlines Airbus A380-800

China Southern was the only Mainland Chinese airline to operate the Airbus A380. The airline initially operated these aircraft on Beijing–Hong Kong and Beijing–Guangzhou routes. However, these services struggled to be profitable. Due to the demand limitation of the airline's home base at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport, few routes from Guangzhou have the demand to support an A380.[citation needed] In efforts to make its A380s viable, China Southern started operating A380 on its Guangzhou–Los Angeles route and on the Guangzhou–Sydney route.[when?] Additionally, China Southern flew A380s to Sydney and Melbourne every summer during its peak travel period. As of 20 June 2015, China Southern began operating the Airbus A380 from Beijing to Amsterdam. The A380 also operated four domestic flights each day between Beijing and Guangzhou. The airline's A380s were retired by November 2022.[142]

Special liveries gallery edit

Services edit

China Southern Airlines offers First Class, Business Class, Premium Economy and Economy Class.

First Class

China Southern Airlines offers an "Experience Luxurious Skybed" on Boeing 787-8s. It is equipped with personal privacy, in-built massage, a 17-inch personal TV and fully reclining seat. It also has First Class on Airbus A330s and Boeing 777-300ERs, which features a seat pitch of 84 inches (210 cm) and converts into a fully flat bed with a personal TV.[143][144]

China Southern Airlines offers Premium First Class on select flights, such as on the Beijing-Guangzhou route. This cabin offers more amenities and is more spacious than Regular First Class, such as a variety of lighting options and a private storage cabinet with a password lock.[145][non-primary source needed]

Business Class

Business Class also offers a fully flat bed, and an adjustable privacy divider. It includes a USB port and a reading light. It also has a 15-inch TV.[146][needs update][non-primary source needed]

Economy Class

Economy Class features a seat and a 9-inch personal TV. It also has a multi-adjustable headrest.[147][non-primary source needed]

Premium Economy Class

China Southern also offers Premium Economy class, which is more spacious than Economy class. In most aircraft, the seats are 35–37 inches (89–94 cm), compared to 31 inches (79 cm) in Economy.[148] The Boeing 777-300ERs however, are equipped with fixed-shell premium economy seats similar to those seen on Air France's Boeing 777s.[149]

Sky Pearl Club edit

China Southern Airlines's frequent-flyer program is called Sky Pearl Club (simplified Chinese: 明珠俱乐部; traditional Chinese: 明珠俱樂部; pinyin: Míngzhū Jùlèbù; Jyutping: ming4 zyu1 keoi1 lok6 bou6). The Sky Pearl Club allows its members earn FFP mileage not only flying China Southern domestic segments but also on flights of other codeshare member airlines. Additionally, Sky Pearl Club members can earn and use mileage on partnered Sichuan Airlines, China Eastern Airlines, and China Airlines flights. Membership of Sky Pearl Club is divided into four tiers: Sky Pearl Gold Card, Sky Pearl Silver Card, Sky Pearl Member Card and Little Pearl On The Palm Card, the first three tier are available for all adult members, but Little Pearl On The Palm Card is only available for members at age 2–11.[150][non-primary source needed]

Incidents and accidents edit

Controversy edit

Shipping of primates to laboratories edit

In 2013, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) found the airline had transported more than 1,000 monkeys into the United States through the arrangements of Air Transport International, without federal permission to do so, and had transported the animals in insecure crates. The USDA ordered China Southern Airlines to pay $11,600 in fines for violations of the Animal Welfare Act (AWA) during the airline's transport of monkeys to laboratories in the United States. Although the USDA cited Air Transport International for failure to provide food and water to the imported animals, China Southern Airlines was previously also ordered to pay $14,438 for AWA violations during one transport that left more than a dozen monkeys dead after they went without food and water for an extended period of time. Following these most recent violations, where the delivered animals were left neglected after arrival in the US, China Southern announced that it would no longer transport laboratory animals to the US. PETA had protested against the airline for these shipments.[155][156]

10 yuan ticketing glitch edit

In November 2023, the airline inadvertently priced its tickets as low as 10 yuan (around $1.37) on its mobile app and travel websites like Trip.com, due to a technical glitch.[157] The airline later confirmed on Weibo that the tickets sold during the two-hour window would be honored.[158]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Global.csair.com: official China Southern Airlines website(in English)
  • Csair.com: official China Southern Airlines website(in Chinese)
  • Xjair.com: China Southern Airlines—Xinjiang Air website

china, southern, airlines, china, southern, redirects, here, geographical, region, south, china, university, with, same, chinese, abbreviation, name, nanjing, university, aeronautics, astronautics, branded, china, southern, major, airline, china, headquartered. China Southern redirects here For the geographical region see South China For the university with the same Chinese abbreviation name see Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics China Southern Airlines branded as China Southern is a major airline in China headquartered in Guangzhou Guangdong It is one of the three major airlines in the country along with Air China and China Eastern Airlines China Southern AirlinesIATA ICAO Callsign CZ CSN CHINA SOUTHERNFounded1 July 1988 35 years ago 1988 07 01 HubsBeijing DaxingGuangzhouSecondary hubsChongqingShanghai PudongShenzhenUrumqiFocus citiesBangkok SuvarnabhumiChangchunChangshaChengdu ShuangliuDalianGuiyangHaikouHangzhouHarbinJieyangKunmingSanyaSeoul IncheonShenyangWuhanXi anZhengzhouZhuhaiFrequent flyer programSky Pearl ClubSubsidiariesChongqing Airlines 60 GAMECOSichuan Airlines 39 XiamenAir 55 Xiongan AirlinesFleet size662Destinations237 1 Parent companyChina Southern Air HoldingTraded asSSE 600029 A share SEHK 1055 H share HeadquartersGuangzhou GuangdongKey peopleTan Wangeng Vice Chairman amp President RevenueCN 127 806 billion 2017 2 Operating incomeCN 8 798 billion 2017 2 Net incomeCN 9 156 billion 2017 2 Total assetsCN 149 14 billion 2017 2 Total equityCN 62 543 billion 2017 2 Employees100 000 2015 2016 3 Websitewww wbr csair wbr com wbr en in English www wbr csair wbr com in Chinese China Southern AirlinesSimplified Chinese中国南方航空Traditional Chinese中國南方航空TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinZhōngguo Nanfang HangkōngYue CantoneseJyutpingzung1gwok3 naam4fong1 hong4hung1China Southern Airlines Company LimitedSimplified Chinese中国南方航空股份公司Traditional Chinese中國南方航空股份公司Literal meaningChina Southern Airlines Company Limited by SharesTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinZhōngguo Nanfang Hangkōng Gǔfen gōngsiYue CantoneseJyutpingzung1gwok3 naam4fong1 hong4hung1 gu2fan6 2 jau5haan6 gung1si1Second alternative Chinese nameChinese南方航空Literal meaningSouthern AirlinesTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinNanfang HangkōngYue CantoneseJyutpingnaam4fong1 hong4hung1Third alternative Chinese nameChinese南航TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinNanhangYue CantoneseJyutpingnaam4 hong4 Established on 1 July 1988 following the restructuring of CAAC Airlines that acquired and merged a number of domestic airlines the airline became the world s sixth largest airline measured by passengers carried and Asia s largest airline in fleet size revenue and passengers carried With its main hubs at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport and Beijing Daxing International Airport the airline operates more than 2 000 flights to more than 200 destinations daily and was a member of SkyTeam until 1 January 2019 The airline started a frequent flyer program partnership with American Airlines in March 2019 The logo of the airline consists of a kapok flower which is also the city flower of Guangzhou on a blue tail fin 4 The company slogan is Fly towards your dreams 飞向您的梦想 The parent company of China Southern Airlines Company Limited is China Southern Air Holding Company a state owned enterprise that is supervised by the State owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council Contents 1 History and development 1 1 Founding 1 2 Expansion 1 3 Mergers and acquisitions 1 4 Recent developments 2 Corporate affairs 2 1 Business trends 2 2 Ownership structure 2 3 Cooperation with American Airlines 2 4 Head office 3 Destinations 3 1 Overview 3 2 Alliance 3 3 Codeshare agreements 4 Fleet 4 1 Current fleet 4 2 Cargo 4 3 Former fleet 4 3 1 Airbus A380 4 4 Special liveries gallery 5 Services 6 Sky Pearl Club 7 Incidents and accidents 8 Controversy 8 1 Shipping of primates to laboratories 8 2 10 yuan ticketing glitch 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory and development editSee also CAAC Airlines Founding edit In 1984 the Chinese government disclosed the decision to decentralize the CAAC Formed in 1949 CAAC was an all encompassing organisation responsible for civil aviation in China as it was tasked with passenger transport resource development and survey work air traffic control aircraft maintenance and personnel training The decentralisation decision would result in numerous regional airlines with four main carriers to be responsible for the majority of international and domestic air traffic Air China China Southern Airlines China Eastern Airlines and China Southwest Airlines CAAC itself would be rationalised into a regulatory and administrative organisation 5 In 1988 CAAC granted its seven regional divisions among which was the Guangzhou Regional Administration limited operating autonomy with the status of associate airlines China Southern Airlines began flying under its own name and livery in February 1991 At this time the aircraft operated some 160 flights a day on 100 routes using the Antonov An 24 Boeing 737 and Boeing 757 along with helicopters and agricultural aircraft 6 7 8 In December 1992 the airline placed a US 800 million order for six Boeing 777s and the associated spare parts and training 9 The airline completed its decentralisation from CAAC when it gained independence on 10 October 1993 As such the airline could from then on restructure itself into shareholding enterprises independently arrange external financing and establish subsidiaries to complement its core enterprise 10 During the airline s early years the carrier was the dominant domestic carrier Together with the two major airlines of China Air China and China Eastern the airline handled half of passenger traffic carried by all Chinese carriers Owing to Air China s status as the country s flag carrier the airline is entitled to extensive international service rights with China Eastern and China Southern s international networks confined to mainly East Asia and within Asia respectively Like other Chinese carriers China Southern was subjected to CAAC s exclusive right to grant operating rights for every prospective route as well as to regulate domestic prices 11 Expansion edit To raise its operating standards and distance itself from mostly unprofitable second and third tiers domestic airlines the carrier signed agreements with a number of foreign carriers regarding staff training and aircraft maintenance with the ultimate aim of being listed on the New York Stock Exchange possibly as soon as early 1995 12 Starting in the mid 1990s China Southern sought to expand its international reach beyond Asia In December 1995 the Chinese and US governments signed an aviation agreement that would allow the commencement of non stop air services between the two countries 13 After having been granted the right to establish services to Amsterdam in early 1996 the airline started Guangzhou Beijing Amsterdam its first long haul route in November 1996 The following year the carrier commenced non stop trans Pacific services to Los Angeles as well as services to Brisbane 14 The start of European and American services coincided with the arrival of the long range Boeing 777s the first of which was delivered in late December 1995 as well as a general expansion and upgrade of the carrier s fleet and the associated facilities Due to engine certification and labor relations issues the delivery of the first Boeing 777 was more than a month behind schedule As a result the carrier considered but ultimately decided against leasing the Boeing 747 400 which would have been used to cover anticipated delays as well as to launch trans Pacific services to the US 15 16 17 18 Nevertheless the airline planned to double its fleet of 67 aircraft In April 1996 the Chinese government would place an order on China Southern s behalf for 10 Airbus A320s the delivery of the first aircraft and China Southern s first Airbus was made the following year 19 20 Guangzhou Aircraft Maintenance Engineering Company which was jointly established with Lockheed Aircraft Services International and Hutchinson Whampoa was carrying out expansion of its aircraft maintenance facilities in anticipation of the increase 21 To keep pace with fast developments China Southern raised capital becoming listed on the Hong Kong and New York Stock Exchanges in July 1997 and raising 600 700 million Much of the funds raised were used to facilitate the airline s fleet expansion repayment of debt and investments in other capital 22 it followed up with domestic listing in 2003 at the Shanghai Stock Exchange 23 By 1997 the airline along with its joint venture airlines Xiamen Airlines Shantou Airlinesm and Guangxi Airlines was carrying some 15 million passengers per year using about 90 aircraft operating about 270 routes among 68 destinations and almost 2 450 flights per week The airline group s revenue totalled some US 1 4 billion with a net income of 90 million 24 25 Mergers and acquisitions edit The end of the 1990s was a period of consolidation for the Chinese airline industry Initially China Southern looked to acquire several smaller non profitable domestic carriers as it sought to highlight its expansion plans in an effort to raise funds among the deals was the purchase of 60 shares of Guizhou Airlines 26 27 Due to the weakening economy amidst the 1997 Asian financial crisis and intense competition among the some 30 Chinese carriers in 1998 CAAC considered a comprehensive restructuring of the industry that would see the consolidation of the airlines into three or five carrier groups 28 29 At one stage it was reported that CAAC was contemplating a forced merger of Air China and China Southern Given the latter s dual listing in Hong Kong and New York it was thought that such a merger would have eased Air China s path towards its own share offering China Southern confirmed that such talks between them were occurring although they ultimately proved fruitless Had the merger proceeded their combined fleets would have numbered some 250 aircraft which would have made the resultant airline the largest in Asia 30 31 32 Although there was considerable resistance to CAAC s call to rationalise the industry in July 2000 the administrative body announced that the ten airlines under its direct management will be merged into three airline groups revolving around Air China China Eastern Airlines and China Southern itself 28 Within a month China Southern had started absorbing Zhengzhou based Zhongyuan Airlines which at the time operated five Boeing 737s and two Xian Y 7 turboprops 33 The carrier would later merge with Shenyang based China Northern Airlines and Urumqi based Xinjiang Airlines to form China Southern Air Holding Co a process that took more than two years and would culminate in China Southern s acquisition of their US 2 billion s worth of assets as well as 1 8 billion of debt in November 2004 Consequently China Southern s fleet expanded from some 140 aircraft to over 210 The takeovers meant that the carrier became the main airline at Shenyang and Urumqi with passenger numbers jumping from 28 2 million in 2004 to 44 1 million in 2005 34 As a result China Southern Airlines became one of the Big Three carriers in the country Since then it has successively taken over shareholding stocks and joined the equity in numerous Chinese carriers The airline is the major shareholder of Xiamen Airlines 55 and Chongqing Airlines 60 it also invests in Sichuan Airlines 39 35 Amidst the major consolidation of the airline industry China Southern in April 2000 started dedicated cargo services from Shenzhen using a Boeing 747 200F which was quickly upgraded to the Boeing 747 400F wet leased from Atlas Air To capitalise on the economic growth of the Pearl River Delta region which includes Hong Kong the carrier constructed a dedicated cargo centre in Shenzhen 36 Successful operations prompted an order for two Boeing 747 400Fs the following year 37 The airline by now had commenced operations to Sydney and Melbourne 38 In September 2003 China Southern signed a purchase agreement for four Airbus A330 200s to be delivered from 2005 This was part of the order placed in April by the China Aviation Supplies Imp amp Exp Group covering 30 aircraft 39 China Southern became the first mainland Chinese A330 operator with the delivery of the first example February 2005 40 China Southern followed up in September 2005 with a further order for eight A330 300s and two A330 200s 41 The month of January 2005 proved to be significant for civil aviation in China in general and China Southern in particular In preparation for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing China Southern and the Chinese government placed several landmark widebody aircraft orders from Airbus and Boeing More specifically on 28 January 2005 the carrier became the first and so far the only Chinese carrier to commit to the Airbus A380 double deck aircraft when it signed a general terms agreement for five examples worth US 1 4 billion at catalogue prices 42 43 On the same day China Southern along with five other domestic carriers placed a bulk order for 60 Boeing 7E7s later renamed the Boeing 787 Dreamliner The aircraft were worth 7 2 billion at list prices and the first example was expected to be delivered in time for the Olympics 44 however the first aircraft did not arrive until June 2013 45 Earlier during the month the CAAC had approved the temporary operations of charter flights between mainland China and Taiwan On the same day as the widebody orders a China Southern Airlines Boeing 777 200 took off from Guangzhou and landed in Taipei the following day becoming the first mainland Chinese aircraft to land in the Republic of China since 1949 when the Kuomintang were involved in Chinese Civil War with the Chinese Communist Party The flight carried 242 passengers home after the Lunar New Year Previously passengers travelling between the mainland and Taiwan had to transit through a third port such as Hong Kong or Macau 46 47 Within three years in July 2008 a China Southern Airlines Airbus A330 carrying 230 tourists 48 again landed in Taipei 49 The governments of China and Taiwan had both agreed to allow direct flights across the Taiwan Strait in June ending six decades of limited air travel between the two sides Following the flight China Southern Airlines Chairman and pilot of the flight Liu Shaoyong said From today onward regular commercial flights will replace the rumbling warplanes over the skies of the Taiwan Strait and relations between the two sides will become better and better 48 49 Following two years of negotiations which had started in August 2004 China Southern in late June 2006 signed an agreement with SkyTeam one of the three global airline alliances formally pledging itself to the improvement of standards with the aim of its eventual joining According to the agreement the airline committed to the upgrade of handling services facilities and training of at least 75 of its staff to SkyTeam s standards 50 51 On 15 November 2007 China Southern officially joined SkyTeam becoming the eleventh carrier to join the grouping and the first mainland Chinese carrier to join an airline alliance The welcoming ceremony was attended by high ranking Chinese government and SkyTeam corporate officials and was held at the Great Hall of the People 52 The carrier s integration with the alliance continued with its entry into SkyTeam Cargo in November 2010 53 and its joint venture carrier Xiamen Airlines formal joining in November 2012 With China Eastern s ascension in June 2011 SkyTeam furthered its leading presence on the mainland Chinese market the remaining Big Three carrier Air China is a member of Star Alliance 54 55 It followed up with another Airbus order on 7 July 2006 when it confirmed a deal covering the purchase of 50 more A320 narrow bodies for delivery from 2009 56 The order included 13 A319 100s 20 A320 200s and 17 A321 200s reportedly worth 3 3 billion at list price 57 In December 2005 China Southern Airlines along with CASGC announced an order with Boeing for 9 Boeing 737 700s and 11 Boeing 737 800s In June 2006 China Southern Airlines confirmed another order of 3 Boeing 737 700s and 7 Boeing 737 800s The deliveries would continue through 2010 58 On 18 October 2006 China Southern Airlines placed an order for 6 Boeing 777 freighters striding forward a brand new step in its cargo development 59 The aircraft would be delivered from November 2008 to July 2010 On 20 August 2007 China Southern Airlines announced its intention for an order of 25 Boeing 737 700s and 30 Boeing 737 800s which will be delivered from May 2011 to October 2013 60 It was a mere two months before on 23 October 2007 China Southern Airlines announced that it had placed an order for 10 additional Airbus A330 200s The order has a listed price of US 1 677 billion and the aircraft will be delivered from March 2010 to August 2012 61 nbsp China Southern Airlines office in Melbourne Recent developments edit During 2009 China Southern Airlines remodeled its strategy from a point to point hub to a full hub and spoke carrier which has been proven successful Along with that the airline has rapidly expanded its international market share particularly in Australia where passenger numbers in 2011 have been 97 greater than in 2010 62 On 21 January 2010 China Southern Airlines announced an order for an additional 20 A320 200s scheduled for delivery from 2011 due to the falling fuel costs and surging passenger demand 63 In March 2010 the Chinese carrier issued new shares in Hong Kong and Shanghai 2010 to raise 10 75 billion yuan 1 57 billion in a bid to pay off outstanding loans 64 In December CNY810 million 121 5 million was injected by China Southern Airlines into its subsidiary Xiamen Airlines to fund its fleet expansion 65 In November 2010 China Southern Airlines signed an agreement with Airbus for the purchase of six A330s and 30 A320s 200 66 On 11 January 2011 China Southern Airlines announced a lease for 10 Embraer E 190 set to be delivered from the second half of 2011 On 27 January 2011 China Southern Airlines was awarded a four star ranking by Skytrax It is the largest airline to hold this title 67 On 17 October 2011 China Southern Airlines made its first flight with the Airbus A380 Initially the airline deployed the A380s on domestic routes flying between Guangzhou Beijing Shanghai and Hong Kong At the same time the carrier conducted negotiations to commence A380 international services Due to the government imposed limitation which confined an international route to a single airline China Southern in August 2012 announced its intention to initiate Beijing Paris services in cooperation with Air China pending government approval Two months later the A380 was deployed on Guangzhou Los Angeles services 68 Early A380 operations were unprofitable and the aircraft underutilised services to Sydney were thus launched in October 2013 69 By May 2013 talks with Air China on Beijing Paris services had ceased 70 While China Southern like the other Big Three specify Chinese carriers had been expanding rapidly since 2000 much of their activities had been focused on the domestic market 71 With the increase in outflow of Chinese tourists who in 2012 for example spent 102 billion internationally 72 as well as the rapid construction and introduction of high speed rail in China the carrier shifted its outlook overseas in order to sustain growth 71 Owing to the location of its hub at Guangzhou which hinders the airline effectively serving the North American market the airline concentrated its international expansion on Australasia In June 2012 with the inauguration of services from Guangzhou to London Heathrow the airline started marketing its services connecting Europe and Australia as the Canton Route 73 74 an alternative to the Kangaroo Route flown by carriers such as Qantas It hoped to attract the predominantly business traffic that travel between Europe and Australia and channel such sixth freedom traffic as well as traffic from mainland China through its Guangzhou hub thereby transforming the carrier s network from one that emphasises point to point to a hub and spoke system 75 76 The carrier by now had added cities such as Auckland Istanbul Perth and Vancouver to its route map 73 77 78 During May June 2012 China Southern Airlines has recruited Dutch flight attendants to serve the First and Business class sections for flights from Guangzhou to Amsterdam 79 On 7 June 2013 China Southern Airlines began operating its first Boeing 787 citation needed In early 2015 it was announced that the airline would lease 24 Airbus A320neo aircraft from AerCap for delivery between 2016 and 2019 80 On 15 November 2018 the airline announced that it would leave SkyTeam by 1 January 2019 and will strengthen its partnership with American Airlines and others 81 The announcement lead to speculation that it will join Oneworld alongside Hong Kong carrier Cathay Pacific Various media outlets reported that while analysts predict that its Oneworld move could threaten Cathay Pacific s position in the alliance other analysts states that China Southern joining Oneworld would benefit Cathay more due to different target markets 82 In March 2019 the airline announced a frequent flyer partnership with American Airlines 83 Currently the airline plans for more flexible tie ups with other carriers mostly with Oneworld members such as Qatar Airways while not joining the alliance for a few years in order to fulfill its dream as world s largest airline 84 On 26 September 2019 China Southern operates at Beijing Daxing International Airport alongside its former and current partners and all of its flights to and from Beijing are transferred to Daxing on 25 October 2020 In November 2022 China Southern scheduled their last Airbus A380 flights prior to their planned retirement citation needed Corporate affairs editBusiness trends edit The key trends for the China Southern Airlines Group are as of the financial year ending December 31 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Revenue RMB b 99 5 98 5 108 111 114 127 143 154 92 5 101 87 Net profit RMB b 3 7 2 7 2 3 4 8 5 8 6 8 3 3 3 0 11 8 11 0 33 7 Number of employees 73 668 80 175 82 132 82 132 93 132 100 831 100 831 103 876 100 431 98 098 97 899 Number of passengers m 86 4 91 7 100 109 114 126 139 151 96 8 98 5 62 6 Passenger load factor 79 9 79 4 79 4 80 5 80 5 82 2 82 4 82 8 71 4 71 2 66 3 Fleet size 491 561 612 667 702 754 840 862 867 878 894 References 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 Ownership structure edit 96 Owner Number of shares held Percentage of shares held 1 China Southern Airlines Group Co Ltd 9404468936 51 9 2 Nanlong Holdings Limited 2612124036 14 41 3 Hong Kong Securities Clearing Company Limited Agent 1750815837 9 66 4 Hong Kong Securities Clearing Company Limited 654597606 3 61 5 China Securities Finance Corporation Limited 320484148 1 77 6 American Airlines 270606272 1 49 7 China Aviation Oil Holding Company Limited 261685354 1 44 8 Spring Airlines Co Ltd 140043961 0 77 9 China State Owned Enterprise Structural Adjustment Fund Co Ltd 72077475 0 4 10 GF Ruiyi Leading Mixed Securities Investment Fund 70644579 0 39 Cooperation with American Airlines editAmerican Airlines invested 200 million in China Southern Airlines in March 2017 laying a strong foundation for a long term relationship between two of the world s largest airlines After the investment American Airlines holds a 2 7 equity stake in China Southern Airlines 97 American Airlines and China Southern are two of the world s largest airlines with complementary networks offering customers unparalleled destinations in both the business and leisure traveler markets The two airlines have signed codeshare and interline agreements to provide travelers with flights to more destinations in China North and South America The codeshare route partnership includes the ability to earn and redeem AAdvantage miles check baggage through and book tickets 98 nbsp The China Southern Air Building the company headquarters located in Guangzhou Head office edit China Southern is headquartered in the China Southern Air Building at 68 Qixin Road 齐心路 in Baiyun District Guangzhou Guangdong Province 99 non primary source needed It was previously at 278 Jichang Airport Road 机场路 in Baiyun District 100 101 102 China Southern had plans to open a new headquarters facility on a 988 acre 400 ha site on the outskirts of Guangzhou about 4 miles 6 4 km from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport Woods Bagot won a competition for the architect firm which would design the facility The proposed site consists of two parcels of land on opposite sides of a highway leading to Baiyun Airport both sites are shaped like wings The site will have a bridge and light rail system that operates above the highway to connect the two parcels which will each have distinct functions For instance the east parcel will house internal functions such as the data center facilities staff dormitories and the training center The airline wants it to be aesthetically pleasing from the air since it sits below a runway approach The site will have a lot of outdoor space which Woods Bagot designed along with Hargreaves Associates and Sherwood Design Engineers Jean Weng a Woods Bagot Beijing based principal said Most Chinese cities are very dense and very urban but China Southern wants to create a human scale campus that s close to nature 103 The new headquarters was opened in August 2016 citation needed Destinations editOverview edit Main article List of China Southern Airlines destinations China Southern Airlines serves 193 destinations in 35 countries worldwide 104 It maintains a strong presence in the domestic market with its main hubs at Beijing Daxing International Airport and Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport with secondary hubs at Shanghai Pudong International Airport Chongqing Jiangbei International Airport and Urumqi Diwopu International Airport along with other focus cities in Changchun Changsha Dalian Shenyang Shenzhen Wuhan and Zhengzhou The airline plans to continue to develop Chongqing and Urumqi as hubs as well to exploit the domestic market potential 105 China Southern offers 485 flights a day from its Guangzhou hub and 221 from its Beijing hub 62 The airline provides services to 65 international destinations Most of the international flights link Guangzhou with world cities There are also plenty of international flights operated through Beijing Shanghai Urumqi notably to Central Asia and Middle east and Dalian to Japan South Korea and Russia China Southern Airlines has developed an extensive network to Southeast Asia and also has become the Chinese airline with the largest presence in Australia 106 non primary source needed China Southern is also considering expanding into the South American markets as well as further expansion into the African market 74 non primary source needed Alliance edit This section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources China Southern Airlines news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message On 28 August 2004 China Southern Airlines signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the airline alliance SkyTeam On 15 November 2007 the airline was officially welcomed as the 11th member of SkyTeam becoming the first mainland Chinese airline to join any global airline alliance 107 expanding the alliance s presence on mainland China On 24 December 2018 China Southern Airlines released an official statement saying that it would discontinue its SkyTeam membership on 1 January 2019 and will also terminate its partnership with China Eastern Airlines and Delta Air Lines 108 non primary source needed Codeshare agreements edit China Southern Airlines codeshares with the following airlines 109 110 Aeroflot 111 112 Aerolineas Argentinas Air Canada selected routes only Air France Joint Venture Partner 113 American Airlines Asiana Airlines British Airways 114 China Airlines China Express Airlines Czech Airlines Emirates 115 Etihad Airways Finnair 116 Iberia Garuda Indonesia Japan Airlines Kenya Airways KLM Joint Venture Partner 113 Korean Air LATAM Airlines Group Lufthansa Malaysia Airlines 117 Mandarin Airlines Pakistan International Airlines Qantas Qatar Airways Saudia 118 Sichuan Airlines Vietnam Airlines WestJet XiamenAirFleet editCurrent fleet edit nbsp A China Southern Airlines Airbus A330 200 on short final to Amsterdam Airport Schiphol in 2011 nbsp A China Southern Airlines Airbus A350 900 landing at Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport in 2019 nbsp A China Southern Airlines Boeing 787 8 Dreamliner arrives at Heathrow Airport 2015 As of December 2023 update China Southern Airlines operates the following aircraft 119 120 China Southern Airlines Passenger Fleet Aircraft In service Orders Passengers 121 Notes B E E Total Airbus A319 100 9 4 18 108 130 122 Airbus A319neo 4 5 123 4 24 108 136 124 Launch customer 125 Airbus A320 200 100 8 24 120 152 4 18 138 160 24 166 Airbus A320neo 50 17 123 4 24 138 166 Airbus A321 200 97 12 24 143 179 4 18 167 189 24 195 Airbus A321neo 60 60 123 4 24 167 195 12 18 172 200 Airbus A330 200 5 18 244 262 12 24 242 278 Airbus A330 300 26 30 253 283 28 258 286 Airbus A350 900 20 28 24 262 314 123 Boeing 737 700 19 4 18 106 128 126 24 134 127 Boeing 737 800 160 8 24 132 164 4 24 150 178 18 147 169 150 172 Boeing 737 MAX 8 27 41 citation needed 4 24 150 178 128 Boeing 777 300ER 15 1 citation needed 28 28 305 361 129 Boeing 787 8 10 18 248 266 Boeing 787 9 17 28 28 220 276 3 orders were transferred to XiamenAir 130 269 297 Comac ARJ21 700 26 9 131 90 90 Comac C919 1 4 citation needed TBA Deliveries started mid 2023 132 China Southern Cargo Fleet Boeing 777F 17 Cargo Total 662 138 Cargo edit nbsp A China Southern Cargo Boeing 777F landing at Frankfurt Airport in 2010 China Southern Cargo is the cargo subsidiary of China Southern Airlines The cargo airline provides services between mainland China and North America Europe and Australia where destinations such as Amsterdam Anchorage Chicago Frankfurt Los Angeles Vancouver Vienna and London Stansted are served from its main hub at Shanghai Pudong International Airport with cargo flights to Amsterdam and Milan from Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport citation needed The cargo subsidiary joined the SkyTeam Cargo alliance in November 2010 and withdrew on 1 January 2019 following the airline s withdrawal from SkyTeam 133 Former fleet edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A former China Southern Cargo Boeing 747 400F nbsp A former China Southern Xian Y 7 at Beijing Civil Aviation Museum China Southern Airlines previously operated the following aircraft 134 China Southern Airlines Retired Fleet Aircraft Number Introduced Retired Notes Refs Airbus A300 600R 6 2004 2011 Airbus A300 600RF 1 2004 2011 Airbus A380 800 5 2011 2022 Last scheduled flights on 6 November 2022 135 ATR 72 500 5 2004 2011 Boeing 737 200 10 1988 2006 Boeing 737 300 36 1991 2015 Three aircraft are stored After retired most aircraft were converted into freighters 136 Boeing 737 300QC 2 2003 2005 After retired most aircraft were converted into freighters Disposed to China Postal Airlines Boeing 737 500 12 1991 2009 Disposed to Aerolineas Argentinas Boeing 747 400F 2 2002 2022 Disposed to SF Airlines 137 Boeing 757 200 32 1987 2018 After retired most aircraft were converted into freighters Boeing 767 300ER 6 1992 1998 Boeing 777 200 10 1995 2018 Boeing 777 200ER 6 1997 2014 Three aircraft are stored Embraer ERJ 145 6 2004 2013 Embraer E190 20 2011 2021 138 McDonnell Douglas MD 82 23 2003 2008 The last one left in 2010 139 McDonnell Douglas MD 90 30 13 2004 2011 Disposed to Delta Air Lines Saab 340 4 1992 1997 Disposed to Shandong Airlines 140 Short 360 3 Un known 1994 One aircraft scrapped in 2002 Remainder disposed to Servicios Aereos Profesionales 141 Xian Y 7 Un known Un known Un known Airbus A380 edit nbsp A former China Southern Airlines Airbus A380 800 China Southern was the only Mainland Chinese airline to operate the Airbus A380 The airline initially operated these aircraft on Beijing Hong Kong and Beijing Guangzhou routes However these services struggled to be profitable Due to the demand limitation of the airline s home base at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport few routes from Guangzhou have the demand to support an A380 citation needed In efforts to make its A380s viable China Southern started operating A380 on its Guangzhou Los Angeles route and on the Guangzhou Sydney route when Additionally China Southern flew A380s to Sydney and Melbourne every summer during its peak travel period As of 20 June 2015 China Southern began operating the Airbus A380 from Beijing to Amsterdam The A380 also operated four domestic flights each day between Beijing and Guangzhou The airline s A380s were retired by November 2022 142 Special liveries gallery edit nbsp Airbus A330 243 B 6057 in 2010 Asian Games Livery nbsp Airbus A330 323 B 8870 in Canton Lychee Livery nbsp Boeing 737 800 B 6069 in Guizhou Livery nbsp Boeing 787 9 Dreamliner B 1168 with 787th Boeing 787 logo nbsp Boeing 777 300ER B 2007 in WorldSkills LiveryServices editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2021 This section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources China Southern Airlines news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message China Southern Airlines offers First Class Business Class Premium Economy and Economy Class First Class China Southern Airlines offers an Experience Luxurious Skybed on Boeing 787 8s It is equipped with personal privacy in built massage a 17 inch personal TV and fully reclining seat It also has First Class on Airbus A330s and Boeing 777 300ERs which features a seat pitch of 84 inches 210 cm and converts into a fully flat bed with a personal TV 143 144 China Southern Airlines offers Premium First Class on select flights such as on the Beijing Guangzhou route This cabin offers more amenities and is more spacious than Regular First Class such as a variety of lighting options and a private storage cabinet with a password lock 145 non primary source needed Business Class Business Class also offers a fully flat bed and an adjustable privacy divider It includes a USB port and a reading light It also has a 15 inch TV 146 needs update non primary source needed Economy Class Economy Class features a seat and a 9 inch personal TV It also has a multi adjustable headrest 147 non primary source needed Premium Economy Class China Southern also offers Premium Economy class which is more spacious than Economy class In most aircraft the seats are 35 37 inches 89 94 cm compared to 31 inches 79 cm in Economy 148 The Boeing 777 300ERs however are equipped with fixed shell premium economy seats similar to those seen on Air France s Boeing 777s 149 Sky Pearl Club editThis section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources China Southern Airlines news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message China Southern Airlines s frequent flyer program is called Sky Pearl Club simplified Chinese 明珠俱乐部 traditional Chinese 明珠俱樂部 pinyin Mingzhu Julebu Jyutping ming4 zyu1 keoi1 lok6 bou6 The Sky Pearl Club allows its members earn FFP mileage not only flying China Southern domestic segments but also on flights of other codeshare member airlines Additionally Sky Pearl Club members can earn and use mileage on partnered Sichuan Airlines China Eastern Airlines and China Airlines flights Membership of Sky Pearl Club is divided into four tiers Sky Pearl Gold Card Sky Pearl Silver Card Sky Pearl Member Card and Little Pearl On The Palm Card the first three tier are available for all adult members but Little Pearl On The Palm Card is only available for members at age 2 11 150 non primary source needed Incidents and accidents editChina Southern Airlines Flight 301 On 31 August 1988 a Hawker Siddeley Trident 2E B 2218 struck approach lights at Kai Tak Airport and struck a lip collapsing the right main landing gear the aircraft then slid off the runway into Kowloon Bay killing 7 of the 89 on board The cause was undetermined but windshear may have been a factor 151 Guangzhou Baiyun aircraft collision On 2 October 1990 a hijacked Xiamen Airlines Boeing 737 crashed into a China Southern Airlines Boeing 757 killing 128 people from both aircraft China Southern Airlines Flight 3943 On 24 November 1992 China Southern Airlines Flight 3943 a Boeing 737 300 crashed into a hill near Guilin Guangxi due to an engine thrust malfunction All 141 people on board were killed 152 153 China Southern Airlines Flight 3456 On 8 May 1997 China Southern Flight 3456 a Boeing 737 300 crashed on approach to Shenzhen Bao an International Airport killing 35 people and injuring 9 154 Controversy editShipping of primates to laboratories edit In 2013 the United States Department of Agriculture USDA found the airline had transported more than 1 000 monkeys into the United States through the arrangements of Air Transport International without federal permission to do so and had transported the animals in insecure crates The USDA ordered China Southern Airlines to pay 11 600 in fines for violations of the Animal Welfare Act AWA during the airline s transport of monkeys to laboratories in the United States Although the USDA cited Air Transport International for failure to provide food and water to the imported animals China Southern Airlines was previously also ordered to pay 14 438 for AWA violations during one transport that left more than a dozen monkeys dead after they went without food and water for an extended period of time Following these most recent violations where the delivered animals were left neglected after arrival in the US China Southern announced that it would no longer transport laboratory animals to the US PETA had protested against the airline for these shipments 155 156 10 yuan ticketing glitch edit In November 2023 the airline inadvertently priced its tickets as low as 10 yuan around 1 37 on its mobile app and travel websites like Trip com due to a technical glitch 157 The airline later confirmed on Weibo that the tickets sold during the two hour window would be honored 158 See also edit nbsp Aviation portal nbsp Companies portal nbsp China portal Civil aviation in China List of airlines of China Transport in ChinaReferences edit China Southern Airlines on ch aviation ch aviation Retrieved 9 November 2023 a b c d e China Southern Airlines Co Ltd 2017 Annual Results PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 31 March 2018 SkyTeam 2015 Facts and Figures PDF China Southern Airlines Archived from the original PDF on 18 May 2015 Retrieved 17 May 2015 China Southern Airlines Retrieved on 10 June 2017 Company Profile China Southern Airlines All change at CAAC Flight International 127 3941 Surrey UK IPC Transport Press 20 5 January 1985 ISSN 0015 3710 Retrieved 1 October 2016 Carey Susan 17 May 1991 China Southern Airlines Feels Strains of Decentralization and Rapid Growth Wall Street Journal Proctor Paul 23 September 1991 China Southern Invests Heavily to Meet Booming Passenger and Freight Demand Aviation Week amp Space Technology 135 12 New York McGraw Hill 34 ISSN 0005 2175 Directory World Airlines Flight International 27 March 2007 p 55 Cole Jeff 18 December 1992 Boeing Gets 700 Million Order From Chinese Airline for Six Jets The Wall Street Journal Asia p 2 Bailey John 13 19 October 1993 China s big three gain independence Flight International 144 4391 London UK Reed Business Publishing 9 ISSN 0015 3710 Retrieved 1 October 2016 Le Thuong T Winter 1997 Reforming China s airline industry From state owned monopoly to market dynamism Transportation Journal 37 2 48 51 52 ISSN 0041 1612 JSTOR 20713344 Kahn Joseph Jordan Miriam 1 November 1994 China s Big State Airlines Are Flying in New Direction They Seek Operating Accords and Possibly Funds From Foreign Lines Wall Street Journal p B4 U S China sign accord for non stop air service Chicago Tribune Associated Press 24 December 1995 p 11 For Amsterdam see Asian Pacific Brief KLM Royal Dutch Airlines The Wall Street Journal Asia 24 June 1996 p 4 and Asia Pacific report Air Transport World 33 11 New York Penton Media 20 November 1996 ISSN 0002 2543 For Los Angeles see Miller Nick 22 July 1997 GE90 powers 1st twin engine China U S flight Cincinnati Post For Brisbane see Bailey Murray 13 November 1997 CSA set for leading aviation role South China Morning Post p 2 China Southern s first Business Times Kuala Lumpur 2 January 1996 p 1 Interim Lease Plan Flight International 148 4496 London UK Reed Business Publishing 11 1 7 November 1995 ISSN 0015 3710 Retrieved 1 October 2016 Ionides Nicholas 10 October 1995 China airline set to double size of fleet South China Morning Post p 10 777 Model Summary Boeing Archived from the original on 31 October 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2011 Airbus wins order from China for planes valued at 1 5 billion Wall Street Journal 11 April 1996 p A4 China Southern Airlines receives first A320 from Airbus Flight International 152 4581 London UK Reed Business Publishing 10 2 8 July 1997 ISSN 0015 3710 Retrieved 1 October 2016 Mecham Michael 10 January 1994 Gameco to grow beyond home base Aviation Week amp Space Technology 140 2 New York McGraw Hill 41 ISSN 0005 2175 China Southern Airlines Files for Global IPO The Wall Street Journal Asia 27 June 1997 p 20 Dela Cruz Ramoncito 28 July 2003 Shares of China Southern Rise 44 in Shanghai Debut Wall Street Journal Retrieved 9 October 2016 Mackey Michael September 1997 Mainland powerhouse Air Transport World 34 9 New York Penton Media 27 28 ISSN 0002 2543 Proctor Paul 31 March 1997 China Southern Closes on Air China for Premier Spot Aviation Week amp Space Technology 146 13 New York McGraw Hill 44 ISSN 0005 2175 Walker Tony 30 January 1997 China Southern eyes its country cousins Financial Times p 29 Chan Christine 15 April 1998 Guizhou stake for China Southern South China Morning Post p 2 a b Ionies Nicholas 16 22 September 2003 Bigger Is Better Flight International London UK Reed Business Publishing ISSN 0015 3710 Retrieved 17 January 2011 Wang Xiangwei 11 March 1999 Mergers in air after huge losses South China Morning Post p 5 Jezioski Andrzej 7 13 July 1999 Beijing may force merger of Air China and China Southern Flight International 156 4684 London UK Reed Business Publishing 19 ISSN 0015 3710 Retrieved 9 October 2016 Chinese Carriers Deny Merger Talks World Airline News 9 29 1 16 July 1999 Jasper Chris 21 27 July 1999 China Southern begins merger talks with Air China Flight International 156 4686 London UK Reed Business Publishing 6 ISSN 0015 3710 Retrieved 9 October 2016 Jeziorski Andrjez 8 14 August 2000 Chinese airline mergers begin Surrey UK Reed Business Publishing 7 Retrieved 9 October 2016 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help For start of merger see Brown Owen 14 October 2002 Chinese Airlines Announce Mergers Flagship Carrier Air China Can Now Set Its Sights on Public Share Offer The Wall Street Journal Asia p A3 For completion of merger asset and debt figures and fleet size see Dennis William 16 November 2004 China Southern Acquires China Northern Xinjiang Aviation Daily 358 33 5 For the claim that the carrier is the largest airline at Shenyang and Urumqi see China Southern 6th airline in history to carry over 100m passengers Now for improved efficiency Centre for Aviation 6 January 2015 Retrieved 11 October 2016 For passenger numbers see China Southern Joins world top 10 expands globally with alliance membership Anna aero 11 April 2008 Retrieved 10 October 2016 For Xiamen Airlines see Ge Lena 9 December 2015 China Southern Takes 4 Stake in Xiamen Air for 627 Million Yuan China Aviation Daily Retrieved 11 October 2016 For Chongqing Airlines see Cantle Katie 5 April 2007 China Southern looks west with new Chongqing Airlines Air Transport World Retrieved 11 October 2016 For Sichuan Airlines see Sichuan Airlines becomes China s 7th airline to have 100 aircraft Next 10 years another 100 Centre for Aviation 21 May 2015 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Jeziors Andrzej 22 28 August 2000 China Southern to buy and operate 747 freighter fleet Flight International 158 4743 London UK Reed Business Publishing Retrieved 11 October 2015 Ionides Nicholas 1 7 May 2001 China Southern orders 747s to expand cargo operation Flight International London UK Reed Business Publishing Retrieved 11 October 2016 Hawkes Phil 16 May 2014 China airlines promote new kangaroo routes from Australia to Europe and North America The Australian Retrieved 12 October 2016 China Southern Airlines signs purchase agreement for 4 a330 200 aircraft Press release Airbus 29 September 2003 Archived from the original on 22 May 2013 Retrieved 21 October 2011 China Southern Airlines receives first A330 200 aircraft Press release Airbus 28 February 2005 Retrieved 21 October 2011 permanent dead link China Southern Airlines jointly with CASGC orders ten additional Airbus A330s Press release Airbus 6 September 2005 Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2016 China Southern Airlines Company Limited and China Aviation Supplies Imp purchase of five A380s Press release Airbus 28 January 2005 Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2016 China Southern Airlines orders five Airbus superjumbos AP Worldstream Associated Press 28 January 2005 Senator says Chinese airlines to order 60 7E7s USA Today Associated Press 28 January 2016 Archived from the original on 11 November 2016 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Cantle Katie 3 June 2013 China Southern Airlines takes delivery of first 787 Air Transport World Retrieved 11 October 2016 China Approves Charter Flights to Taiwan The Wall Street Journal Asia 19 January 2005 p A2 Chinese jet makes historic Taiwan flight USA Today 28 January 2005 Retrieved 17 January 2011 a b China Taiwan direct flights begin Fox News 3 July 2008 Retrieved 17 January 2011 a b Direct flights between China and Taiwan start The New York Times 4 July 2008 Retrieved 17 January 2011 Barling Russell 24 May 2006 China Southern set to join SkyTeam alliance Deal will open carrier s domestic network to global traffic South China Morning Post p 2 Zhan Lisheng 29 June 2006 Airline inks deal to join SkyTeam China Daily North American ed p 10 Francis Leithen 15 November 2007 China Southern officially joins SkyTeam Flightglobal Retrieved 13 October 2016 China Southern Airlines to Join Skyteam Cargo in 2010 Press release SkyTeam Archived from the original on 9 January 2021 Retrieved 13 October 2016 SkyTeam Welcomes Xiamen Airlines SkyTeam 21 November 2016 Archived from the original on 11 January 2021 Retrieved 13 October 2016 Xiamen Airlines to join SkyTeam in 2012 strengthening the alliance s presence in China Centre for Aviation 18 November 2016 Retrieved 13 October 2016 Largest Chinese airline buys 50 Airbus jets Business International Herald Tribune The New York Times 31 December 1969 Retrieved 20 January 2011 China Southern Agrees to Purchase 50 Airbus A320s Update3 Bloomberg 7 July 2006 Retrieved 20 January 2011 中国150架波音737订单全部确认 in Chinese China Boeing China 14 September 2006 Archived from the original on 19 December 2007 中国南方航空公司宣布订购波音777货机 in Chinese China Boeing China 19 October 2006 Archived from the original on 19 December 2007 China Southern to order 55 more 737s Flight International London UK Reed Business Publishing 21 August 2007 Retrieved 21 October 2011 Search Global Edition The New York Times International Herald Tribune 29 March 2009 Retrieved on 19 December 2010 a b China Southern Current Status and Future Planning Overview as of Oct 2011 Retrieved 9 May 2015 China Southern Airlines to buy 20 Airbus A320 News alibaba com Retrieved on 19 December 2010 China Southern Airlines to Raise 1 57 Billion to Repay Loans Bloomberg BusinessWeek 8 March 2010 Retrieved 17 January 2011 dead link China Southern provides 122 million to Xiamen for fleet expansion ATW Online Retrieved 8 September 2018 Reed Business Information Limited China Southern to order six A330s and 30 A320s Retrieved 9 May 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help China Southern earns four star ranking by SKYTRAX Breaking Travel News Retrieved 9 May 2015 SkyTeam seeks clarity on proposed China Southern Air China joint A380 operation Centre for Aviation 21 February 2013 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Yield pressure for China Southern Airlines as it deploys A380 to Sydney Centre for Aviation 29 April 2013 Retrieved 16 November 2016 Chiu Joanne 9 May 2013 China Southern Ends Talks With Rival Wall Street Journal a b Chinese airlines sixth freedom roles could challenge Middle East Asian European hubs this decade Centre for Aviation 26 January 2012 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Nayak Shivali 14 July 2015 Chinese travellers prefer independent travel rely on online world to make choices ABC Retrieved 11 October 2016 a b China Southern takes off on Canton Route Australian Aviation 5 June 2012 Retrieved 11 October 2016 a b China Southern Airlines Co LTD www csair com Archived from the original on 10 June 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2018 China Southern Airlines to move long haul focus from growth to sustainability and partnerships Centre for Aviation 17 April 2014 Retrieved 11 October 2016 Cantle Katie August 2012 Canton Calling Air Transport World 49 8 22 26 China Southern Airlines launches first route to Turkey Anna aero 1 December 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2016 China Southern Airlines makes debut flight to Vancouver People s Daily 16 June 2011 Archived from the original on 11 October 2016 Retrieved 12 October 2016 China Southern Airlines Co LTD www csair com Archived from the original on 26 May 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2018 China Southern Airlines Airliner World 17 March 2015 Zakis Klara 15 November 2018 Update SkyTeam and China Southern SkyTeam Archived from the original on 16 November 2018 Unlikely wingmen Alliance with mainland carrier could help Cathay South China Morning Post 22 November 2018 Retrieved 25 September 2019 Martin Grant 21 March 2019 American Airlines and China Southern Launch Frequent Flyer Partnership Skift Retrieved 22 March 2019 China Southern eyes world domination and puts Oneworld plans aside South China Morning Post 23 June 2019 Retrieved 25 September 2019 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2012 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2013 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2014 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2015 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2016 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2017 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2018 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2019 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2020 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2021 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 10 November 2023 China Southern Airlines Annual Report 2022 PDF China Southern Airlines Retrieved 9 November 2023 南方航空 600029 主要股东 新浪财经 新浪网 vip stock finance sina com cn Retrieved 23 February 2024 American Airlines ties up partnership with China Southern BBC News 28 March 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2024 China Southern Airlines And American Airlines to Expand Partnership 2018 China Southern Airlines Co Ltd csair com www csair com Retrieved 23 February 2024 Annual Report 2018 PDF China Southern Airlines p 6 PDF p 8 279 Retrieved 18 June 2019 Corporate Information Address China Southern Air Building 68 Qixin Road Baiyun District Guangzhou Guangdong Province PRC Place of Business China Southern Air Building 68 Qixin Road Baiyun District Guangzhou Guangdong Province PRC Investor Archived 27 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine China Southern Airlines Retrieved on 29 October 2010 A hard copy of the Company s complete audited annual report will be provided to any shareholder without charge upon written request to Company Secretary Office China Southern Airlines Company Limited at 278 Jichang Road Guangzhou 510405 Guangdong Province the People s Republic of China 董秘信箱 in Chinese China China Southern Airlines Archived from the original on 1 January 2010 Retrieved 29 October 2010 广东省广州市白云区机场路278号中国南方航空股份有限公司董事会秘书办公室 China Southern Airlines Co Ltd Archived 12 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine BNet Retrieved on 21 October 2011 McKeough Tim China Southern Builds a Woods Bagot designed Airport City in Guangzhou Architectural Record 21 August 2012 Retrieved on 30 August 2012 SkyTeam Fact Sheet June 2013 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 October 2013 China Southern to develop Chongqing Urumqi hubs Retrieved 9 May 2015 中国南方航空股份有限公司 www csair com Archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Retrieved 8 September 2018 SkyTeam Benefits Archived 22 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine skyteam com Retrieved on 19 December 2010 Update on China Southern and SkyTeam PDF Profile on China Southern Airlines CAPA Centre for Aviation Archived from the original on 30 October 2016 Retrieved 30 October 2016 China Southern to keep codeshares after leaving SkyTeam Flight Global Liu Jim 31 October 2017 Aeroflot expands China Southern codeshare to Oceania in NW17 Routesonline Retrieved 31 October 2017 Liu Jim 20 July 2018 China Southern expands Aeroflot European codeshare network from July 2018 Routesonline Retrieved 20 July 2018 a b AF KLM China Southern Xiamen Air to form a single JV Ch Aviation 19 July 2018 British Airways Signs Codeshare Agreement with China Southern Airlines British Airways Press release London International Airlines Group Emirates Forges Codeshare Partnership with China Southern Airlines www emirates com Retrieved 1 February 2019 Finnair and China Southern launch codeshare cooperation that brings five new destinations for Finnair customers in China company finnair com 21 May 2019 Retrieved 21 June 2019 Malaysia Airlines China Southern Airlines launch codeshare flights nst com my 6 July 2023 Saudi Arabian Airlines and China Southern Airlines Sign Codeshare Agreement aviationtribune com Archived from the original on 15 January 2021 Retrieved 8 September 2018 China Southern Fleet Details planespotters net Retrieved 25 September 2023 China Southern Fleet Details airfleets net 空客 China Southern Cabin layout China Southern Airlines Retrieved 29 November 2020 空客 China Southern Airlines Retrieved 29 November 2020 a b c d Airbus Orders and Deliveries XLS monthly updated accessed via Orders amp deliveries Airbus Airbus SAS Retrieved 24 September 2023 CSAIRGlobal 22 February 2022 Honored and delighted to introduce our gorgeous A319 neo aircraft Powered by CFM Leap 1A engines CSAirA319neo fe Tweet via Twitter China Southern takes first pair of A319neos FlightGlobal 23 February 2022 波音 China Southern Airlines Retrieved 29 November 2020 波音 China Southern Airlines Retrieved 29 November 2020 China Southern Resumes 737 MAX Urumqi International Service From Nov 2023 AeroRoutes 10 November 2023 Retrieved 10 November 2023 B777 300ER Introduction China Southern Airlines Co Ltd csair com www csair com Retrieved 17 November 2020 向厦门航空转让3架B787 9飞机购买权项目外聘法律顾问服务成交结果公示 China Southern Airlines Co Ltd provided external legal counsel for the transfer of the right to purchase three B787 9 aircraft to Xiamen AirlinesAnnouncement of the results of the purchase transaction in Chinese 中国南方航空股份有限公司 China s top airlines to buy ARJ21 jets from COMAC Reuters 30 August 2019 Retrieved 7 June 2022 How many C919s will COMAC deliver over the next few years AeroTime 7 September 2023 Retrieved 24 September 2023 China Southern to join SkyTeam Cargo March 2010 News Home Archived 27 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine Air Cargo World Retrieved on 19 December 2010 China Southern Airlines Fleet Details and History planespotters net 19 July 2017 After all China Southern Airlines will retire all five Airbus A380s before the end of 2022 MINNEWS Retrieved 21 February 2022 再见 老伙计 国内最后一架波音737 300客机在郑州退役 in Chinese China 163 com 9 May 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2017 图片 图文 记录GAMECO南航B747货机解封 民航新闻 民航资源网 Photo Record GAMECO China Southern Airlines B747 cargo aircraft unsealed in Chinese China Carnoc Retrieved 28 August 2015 China Southern Airlines ends E190 operations CH Aviation Retrieved 21 April 2021 南航海南分公司欢送最后一架MD82型飞机离琼 in Chinese China Carnoc 4 May 2010 Retrieved 4 May 2010 Saab 340 in the history of China Southern Airlines Retrieved 17 June 2021 Sheds in China The Odd Story of CAAC s Shorts 360s Retrieved 17 June 2021 After all China Southern Airlines will retire all five Airbus A380s before the end of 2022 MINNEWS Retrieved 21 February 2022 SeatGuru Seat Map China Southern www seatguru com Retrieved 27 May 2019 SeatGuru Seat Map China Southern www seatguru com Retrieved 27 May 2019 China Southern Airlines First Class China Southern Airlines Archived from the original on 27 September 2017 Retrieved 15 August 2014 China Southern Airlines First Class China Southern Airlines Archived from the original on 27 September 2017 Retrieved 15 August 2014 China Southern Airlines First Class China Southern Airlines Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 15 August 2014 China Southern to offer premium economy on domestic routes Flight International 18 March 2010 Retrieved 21 October 2011 SeatGuru Seat Map China Southern Airbus A330 200 332 V2 www seatguru com Retrieved 15 October 2017 China Southern Sky Pearl Club Archived from the original on 27 November 2010 Accident description for B 2218 at the Aviation Safety Network Retrieved on 2017 09 04 Accident Database Accident Synopsis 11241992 Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 9 May 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Jet Crashes in China Killing 141 5th Serious Accident in 4 Months The New York Times Accident Database Accident Synopsis 05081997 Archived from the original on 24 May 2013 Retrieved 9 May 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Huang Shaojie 8 January 2015 U S Charter Airline Cited for Neglecting Cargo of Macaques From China Sinosphere New York Times Retrieved 28 January 2015 Huang Shaojie 21 April 2014 China Southern Pays U S Fine Over Monkey Cargo Sinosphere New York Times Retrieved 28 January 2015 Tan Huileng An airline in China accidentally sold tickets for as little as 1 40 and it s honoring the deal Business Insider Retrieved 24 February 2024 Baum Bernadette 9 November 2023 China Southern to honour 1 30 flight tickets sold during glitch Reuter Retrieved 11 November 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to China Southern Airlines Global csair com official China Southern Airlines website in English Csair com official China Southern Airlines website in Chinese Xjair com China Southern Airlines Xinjiang Air website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title China Southern Airlines amp oldid 1220409215, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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