China Daily (Hong Kong)

Unicom JV gives wings to Wi-Fi

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

China United Network Communicat­ions Ltd unveiled a joint venture with local partners on Tuesday, as the country’s second-largest telecom carrier by subscriber­s scrambles to offer in-flight Wi-Fi services.

The State-owned company said UnicomAirN­et, with a registered capital of 200 million yuan ($29.06 million), will develop communicat­ion systems and offer technologi­cal support to enable passengers to surf the internet onboard planes.

The new venture is set up by China Unicom’s broadband network unit, Chinese on-train Wi-Fi service provider Hangmei Online, and a

They ... will promote cooperatio­n in terms of capital, skills and talent.”

unit of Sichuan Haite HighTech Co Ltd, which repairs aircraft equipment.

Jiang Zhengxin, deputy general manager of China Unicom, said the company has been approved by the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the country’s top telecom industry regulator, to experiment with in-flight Wi-Fi services.

An official license is expected to be granted at the end of this year, another senior executive at China Unicom said.

Guo Man, chairman of Hangmei Online, said while China Unicom has a sprawling satellite and on-theground network and operation services, Hangmei Online has an abundance of experience in running on-train and in-bus Wi-Fi ser- million vices, and Sichuan Haite excels in upgrading planes with new communicat­ions systems.

“We are highly complement­ary in skills and resources, enabling us to establish a beachhead in the in-flight connectivi­ty sector which will soon take off,” he added.

Currently, onboard Wi-Fi services are only available in some planes of Chinese airlines. A report by research firm Routehappy shows that 78 percent of airlines in the United States provide some sort of connectivi­ty.

The number in China is 23 percent, according to a local aviation statistics company VariFlight.

But as about 1.2 million Chinese travel by plane every day, an increasing number of consumers requiring internet services.

The move is also part of China Unicom’s broad efforts to seek new growth drivers as its core businesses have stumbled in recent years.

Xiang Ligang, a telecoms expert and CEO of telecom industry website cctime.com, said it is investment-intensive to offer Wi-Fi services on flights, but it will be hard to ask Chinese consumers to pay for connectivi­ty.

Zhang Shuguang, vice-governor of Anhui number of air travels made by Chinese on a daily basis

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