Call the air ambulance:
Medical helicopters tipped for future China boom
Send a link to a friend
[June 08, 2016]
By Siva Govindasamy and Fang Yan
SINGAPORE/BEIJING (Reuters) - As China
opens up its low-level airspace to civilian aircraft, the global
aviation industry is laying the groundwork for a boom beyond private
business jets and pilot training schools - with the purchase of
fleets of air ambulance helicopters.
The freeing up of airways previously reserved for military use is a
huge opportunity for Norbert Ducrot, head of Airbus Group's
helicopters unit in China. Ducrot says there could be enough demand
for more than 3,000 emergency medical choppers in China - up from as
few as about 20 now in service.
While the United States already has more than 1,500 air ambulance
helicopters, China's fleet is minimal because of the civilian
airspace curbs. In a country where the World Health Organisation has
estimated more than 250,000 annual road traffic deaths, air
evacuations from both clogged Chinese city streets and remote rural
areas could speed medical care and save lives.
The change proposed by China's State Council is set to ultimately
raise the ceiling on airspace for general aviation to 3,000 meters
from 1,000 meters. That would radically multiply both the heights
and the routes air ambulances could use, a boon for pioneers like
Qian Siwei's China Air Medical Service Ltd.
"Emergency air medical services have a great growth potential in
China because our target customer is the general public, not just
the privileged," Qian, a gynecologist by training, told Reuters.
While the going rate for a helicopter evacuation is around 30,000
yuan ($4,565) per hour, companies like Qian's offer discount schemes
that can cut costs by as much as 50 percent in some cases.
Based in the province of western Shaanxi, China Air Medical has a
fleet of four helicopters and two business jets, operating with the
backing of local authorities. Qian claimed his service has proved so
popular that three other provinces have invited Chen Air Medical
Service to set up similar operations.
China Air Medical is just one of a raft of operators across a
broader aviation sector that Beijing is seeking to develop into a
thriving home-grown industry. State-owned aircraft maker AVIC, which
also supplies helicopters, is another.
But the liberalization is also enticing Western firms like Airbus
and U.S. aircraft maker Textron Inc, keen to target what they see as
a major growth opportunity.
HELIPADS 'COMPLICATED'
For Airbus executive Ducrot, the arithmetic is simple. He expects to
sell 60 helicopters to China this year - for prices he declined to
disclose - and for the country to buy up to 300 helicopters annually
by 2025 as its economic growth still outpaces developed markets and
liberalization kicks in.
"By 2025, China will become the most important helicopter market in
the world," said Ducrot.
While some local authorities are enthusiastic, as in Qian's case,
and some modern hospitals may be able to accommodate helipads,
China's healthcare sector is already creaking and ageing hospital
infrastructure may act as a brake on air ambulance growth.
At the Sichuan Provincial People's Hospital in the city of Chengdu,
southwestern China, engineer Liu Xiaoxi, said that when the facility
was under construction in the 1980s, a helipad was considered, but
rejected as being "too complicated".
[to top of second column] |
Guests look at a helicopter during the Asian Business Aviation
Conference and Exhibition (ABACE) at Hongqiao International Airport
in Shanghai, China, April 12, 2016. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
"It's difficult to add things on to the building, especially as tall towers have
sprung up on all four sides," said Liu. While some hospitals would be able to
add them, he said, "If you want to add a helipad on top of a building then you
have to design that in early on in terms of the various beams and supports."
Still Beijing is ploughing ahead with reforms, despite uncertainty on issues
like healthcare infrastructure, helipad construction and how Beijing will
regulate a low-level civil aviation business.
GROWTH WARNING
China could have 2,000 general aviation airports by 2030 if the country opens
the sector up to private investment, says Francis Chao, publisher of monthly
publication China Civil Aviation Report and a contractor with the U.S. Federal
Aviation Administration on U.S.-China aviation exchanges.
That compares with a projection by China's State Council of 500 airports by
2020.
But Chao warned growth could be restricted "without further relaxation on flight
permits, availability of chartering and fuel supply, more and accessible
airfield and flight services".
Apart from emergency medical services, companies like Airbus and Textron unit
Bell Helicopters - which declined to comment for this story - are targeting
sales in the rapidly growing domestic tourism market, fire-fighting and police
services, and by companies that need to patrol pipelines and power lines.
For example, Airbus agreed to set up a final assembly line in China for its H135
helicopters last October, though it has yet to announce a location for the new
facility. It's also investing in support services like sales offices,
maintenance hubs and a training center for pilots - the latter being in short
supply across the country.
(Corrects last paragraph to state that Airbus is yet to disclose location for
China H135 helicopter assembly line.)
(Reporting by Siva Govindasamy in SINGAPORE and Fang Yan in BEIJING; Additional
reporting by SHANGHAI newsroom; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|