China to get in-flight mobile by 2009

OnAir comms get a Shenzhen flavour...

By Natasha Lomas, 3 September 2007 13:18

NEWS

China's Shenzhen Airlines has fitted its planes with communications technology that will allow passengers to use their mobile phones to make voice calls and send email and SMS messages during flights.

The OnAir service will be installed across Shenzhen Airlines' full fleet of Airbus A320 and Boeing 737 aircraft by mid-2009. Three "demonstrator" aircraft are also being readied for the Beijing Olympic Games in August 2008.

OnAir said its equipment will be retrofitted on Shenzhen's existing aircraft and line-fitted on new aircraft. The service is aimed at passengers with smart phones or basic handsets.

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The deal with Shenzhen is the third such agreement OnAir has secured that covers an airline's whole fleet - following a pact signed last summer with low-cost carrier Ryanair and an agreement in June this year with AirAsia. The Ryanair in-flight comms service is due to go live by the end of this year, according to an OnAir spokesman, and the AirAsia service is slated to launch in early 2009.

OnAir's service is also being trialled by Air France, the UK's BMI and TAP Portugal on a single aircraft in each airline's fleet.

Benoit Debains, CEO of OnAir - which is a joint venture between aircraft manufacturer Airbus and airline industry IT body Sita - said in a statement: "China is a significant and fast growing aviation market and we are proud to be able to deliver our innovative services that will provide increased levels of passenger services and additional revenues."

Shenzhen Airlines operates more than 130 routes within China and to Japan, Korea, Malaysia and Vietnam. It carried more than seven million passengers in 2006.

OnAir's on-board equipment incorporates technology from Tenzing, the company that pioneered in-flight email, with Inmarsat providing the satellite comms.

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