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Have any of you guys heard updates on the proposed PVG alternate(s) (for arrivals)? I'm guessing HGH, NKG, or NBO, but apparently, ~9 other airports are also being considered.
*Edited to change NNG (obviously impossible) to NKG. |
Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 34070799)
Have any of you guys heard updates on the proposed PVG alternate(s) (for arrivals)? I'm guessing HGH, NNG, or NBO, but apparently, ~9 other airports are also being considered.
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Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 34070799)
Have any of you guys heard updates on the proposed PVG alternate(s) (for arrivals)? I'm guessing HGH, NNG, or NBO, but apparently, ~9 other airports are also being considered.
Local officials are scared of imported COVID. They would be fired if lot of cases show up. Besides, other cities may not have enough quality quarantine hotels. If they are not careful, infections would spread (a.k.a. recent Hua Ting Hotel in Shanghai). |
Originally Posted by kb1992
(Post 34071042)
Besides, other cities may not have enough quality quarantine hotels.
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Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 34071052)
i am guessing they will go with more than one city and that PVG will keep some flights. Since this is a central government initiative, the opinions of local officials probably don't matter much. Do you think they asked Tianjin if it wanted to accept flights that would otherwise go to Beijing?
But Shanghai is different. Other cities could refuse. |
Originally Posted by kb1992
(Post 34071244)
Yeah I can understand Beijing where the emperor lives.
But Shanghai is different. Other cities could refuse. As an aside, I've been pondering (and reading various WeChat accounts about) why they want to do this. The only two theories that seem somewhat plausible to me so far are: 1. to better protect Shanghai; and 2. to relieve pressure on q hotel capacity. #1 doesn't make a great deal of sense to me because, presumably, the affected passengers who wanted to go to Shanghai would still make their way anyway after their quarantines are finished. Let's say they go with, Wuxi, for example; that's not much further from Central Shanghai than PVG. My issue with #2 is that the number of incoming passengers has remained more or less constant for the past year and I haven't heard of any hotel availability crisis situations yet. If they were to increase capacity in a material manner, I could envision issues. However, I've seen no indications that this is in the works. But, another way to max out q hotel rooms would be to increase the duration of the quarantine (e.g. going from 14 days to 28 days would presumably double the demand). This is something that I could see happening. Your thoughts? |
Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 34071299)
TMK, CAAC itself is calling the shots here, so it might as well be Beijing.
As an aside, I've been pondering (and reading various WeChat accounts about) why they want to do this. The only two theories that seem somewhat plausible to me so far are: 1. to better protect Shanghai; and 2. to relieve pressure on q hotel capacity. #1 doesn't make a great deal of sense to me because, presumably, the affected passengers who wanted to go to Shanghai would still make their way anyway after their quarantines are finished. Let's say they go with, Wuxi, for example; that's not much further from Central Shanghai than PVG. My issue with #2 is that the number of incoming passengers has remained more or less constant for the past year and I haven't heard of any hotel availability crisis situations yet. If they were to increase capacity in a material manner, I could envision issues. However, I've seen no indications that this is in the works. But, another way to max out q hotel rooms would be to increase the duration of the quarantine (e.g. going from 14 days to 28 days would presumably double the demand). This is something that I could see happening. Your thoughts? 1) However, positive cases from HK arrivals reached hundreds. This runs out of Q hotels quickly. 2) Recent increase of additional 7 days for people who have no apartment to stay in Shanghai certainly contributes to Q hotel issue. IMHO, 14 days are already excessive. Now 21? That's borderline insane. Of course the whole population is paranoid No.1 in the world about COVID. They have not shut down HK flights. Do people realize why? |
Originally Posted by kb1992
(Post 34071618)
They have not shut down HK flights. Do people realize why?
If they were serious about covid zero they would have shut down all flights from HK and closed the land border. |
Originally Posted by kb1992
(Post 34071618)
Shanghai never ran out of Q hotels in the past two years. Positive cases for international arrivals usually were 10-20 cases at most.
1) However, positive cases from HK arrivals reached hundreds. This runs out of Q hotels quickly. 2) Recent increase of additional 7 days for people who have no apartment to stay in Shanghai certainly contributes to Q hotel issue. They have not shut down HK flights. Do people realize why? |
Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 34071656)
Whether you test positive or negative on arrival, you are still accounted for in the Q hotel numbers...but, might end up going to a hospital in the case of positive. There is no increased demand for Q hotels.
The +7 definitely isn't "recent". Why on earth would they shut down HK flights before flights from other countries? HK is definitely more important than NY or London for most companies here. Also, close contacts of positive cases might be subject to additional Q days. Oh, +7 days in Q hotels for people staying in Shanghai but don't have own property is definitely recent. Last month? Yes they have shut down every international flight with 5+ positive cases. Yet they have not shut down HK flights. We are not debating they should shut down HK flights before other international flights. We are talking about shutting all other int'l flights with small positive cases but allow HK flights to continue with huge positive cases. With hundreds of positive cases from HK arrivals, it's almost like they are inviting imported cases from HK. COVID is No.1 priority in the Kingdom. But why on the earth they are letting so many positive cases come from HK? They shut down Yun Nan border in a day. Folks, please think hard. |
Originally Posted by kb1992
(Post 34071728)
With hundreds of positive cases from HK arrivals, it's almost like they are inviting imported cases from HK.
COVID is No.1 priority in the Kingdom. But why on the earth they are letting so many positive cases come from HK? They shut down Yun Nan border in a day. Folks, please think hard. My dumb optimistic theory is still here: https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/34003232-post1367.html https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/34032001-post53.html (I guess 1 and 2 were wrong, but the point is HK is the scapegoat and the narrative will start to shift). The mainland government has no clue how to actually deal with any case numbers >1000, so it's also possible they're just doing random things and the optimistic theory becomes true not out of policy/narrative shifting but out of necessity. |
Originally Posted by kb1992
(Post 34071728)
When positive cases go up so high, don't you suspect that numbers of daily arrival pax from HK also go up significantly? Or how do you explain additional demand for Shanghai Q hotels?
Also, close contacts of positive cases might be subject to additional Q days. Oh, +7 days in Q hotels for people staying in Shanghai but don't have own property is definitely recent. Last month? Yes they have shut down every international flight with 5+ positive cases. Yet they have not shut down HK flights. We are not debating they should shut down HK flights before other international flights. We are talking about shutting all other int'l flights with small positive cases but allow HK flights to continue with huge positive cases. With hundreds of positive cases from HK arrivals, it's almost like they are inviting imported cases from HK. |
Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 34071656)
Why on earth would they shut down HK flights before flights from other countries? HK is definitely more important than NY or London for most companies here.
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Originally Posted by moondog
(Post 34071762)
If they are Shanghai residents, they do q in their own houses. To date, q hotels are only used for PVG arrivals and, in some cases, people visiting from other cities within China. This policy has been in place since at least last October when I arrived. I don't have access to data on the HK flights, but even if they are being let in with less scrutiny than others, I can't imagine this moves the needle a great deal. I might be wrong, though. http://m.sh.bendibao.com/news/241986.html?src=sogou Before that they can stay at any hotel (not Q hotel) and move freely, with additional tests. This is definitely recent, not October 2021 as you claimed. The Kingdom treats HK so nicely, even though technically HK is considered "international arrival" Just compare how China enforces COVID rules for US vs HK. Huge, huge difference. At this point, every pax from the US must pass 4 different PCR/Anti-gen tests on day 1, 5, 6 before they can board the flight. How many tests HK pax take before flying to PVG? |
Well there are definitely differences at least at an ideological level.
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