Boeing 777 passengers aircrafts of American airlines and British airways airlines are seen at John F. Kennedy Airport on Jan 8, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)
BEIJING - British Airways will double the number of Mandarin-speaking cabin crew on its Chinese mainland routes, its chief customer officer said on Thursday, as the airline seeks to expand in the world's second-largest aviation market.
The IAG-owned carrier expects to have 50 more Mandarin-speaking cabin crew aboard its flights to Beijing and Shanghai by July, Calum Laming told Reuters, which will take the total number to 100 and make the mainland its second-largest overseas crew base after India.
The British flag carrier resumed direct passenger flights to Shanghai in April and to Beijing in June last year, after the mainland reopened borders as the pandemic waned
"Coming back to the market is a major priority for the airline. We would not be out here doubling the crew base size otherwise," Laming said. "Being able to double the number of cabin crew on board has a lot of benefits in terms of language, in terms of cultural awareness."
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The British flag carrier resumed direct passenger flights to Shanghai in April and to Beijing in June last year, after the mainland reopened borders as the pandemic waned.
British Airways was the second-largest operator of flights to and from China in December 2019, flying 133 times a month before the pandemic, according to aviation data provider Cirium.
But the airline is currently offering just 89 flights a month, December 2023 data shows, putting it in fourth position behind the mainland's three largest carriers: Air China, China Eastern Airlines and China Southern Airlines.
Laming said an industry-wide aircraft shortage was the biggest barrier to increasing mainland flights. "Getting new aircraft is very, very difficult at the moment," he added.
Third time lucky?
The British carrier's plan to increase the number of Mandarin-speaking cabin crew on its mainland routes comes after passengers accused three crew-members of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region's Cathay Pacific of being biased against non-English speakers. The three were later fired.
On Monday, Cathay announced it had taken on 100 new Mandarin-speaking cabin crew.
This is British Airway's third crack at building up its brand in the mainland in just over a decade.
READ MORE: Cathay Pacific scandal widely condemned
The airline added flight to Chengdu in 2013, but scrapped the route three years later, citing lack of commercial viability. In 2019, British Airways was the first international airline to announce that it would fly from Beijing's new Daxing Airport, but then the pandemic upended the industry.
"We are really seeing recovery," Laming said. "We had hugely strong leisure demand last summer and we're hoping for a fantastic Chinese New Year peak travel season."