2024年4月27日发(作者:重装机兵3)
China's first private and business jet expo sparks
controversy
A three-day private jet exposition展览会 exclusive for China's super-rich was held from August 13 to 15
at Hongqiao International Airport in Shanghai, with two private jets, Gulstrem 450 and Diamond DA40,
arriving at the parking apron['eiprən停机坪 of the airport on the first day of the event.
Featuring private jet aircrafts display, demonstration flights and exhibition pavilions展览馆,观众席, the
China Business and Private Jet Expo, the first of its kind on the Chinese mainland, appeals many famous
global private aviation service companies who are eager to get a foothold立足点 in China's potentially
massive high-end高端的 market. Even though China has yet to有待于 open airspace for private jets,
this industry is becoming one of the biggest burgeoning['bə:dʒəniŋ生长迅速的 markets.
The expo also draws concerns about China's polluted air industry as the nation is on its way to
advocating a low-carbon society and taking greater responsibilities in the global climate change issue.
Sun Gang, director of the tax policy research office of the Ministry of Finance told the Global Times that
currently there are no full-fledged发育完全的 legal systems about environmental taxes in China, nor a
tailor-made policy for the domestic aviation industry.
In China, passengers exempt[iɡ'zempt from免除 environmental duties seem to be a normal case in
commercial flights. Thus, private aviation pollution becomes a legal vacuum['vækjuəm真空 where no
related department is involved in.
In fact, few companies and buyers at the expo are aware of the private jets' lion-share pollution and the
high per capita 人均emission.
"Compared to commercial passenger aircrafts, this (the number of private jets) is a very small fraction,"
said Vasily Stupinskiy, a staff with Aerobridge, a company providing aviation consulting service in
Georgia. And every aircraft, whether it's commercial or private, contributes to pollution, he added.
"I'm not sure if the government has any policies to tax the private aviation industry with regards to关于
its pollution," said Li Long, sales manager of Shandong Bin Ao Aircraft Industries Co., Ltd. He is among
most of the exhibitors who hardly care about the country's tax system on private jets' pollution.
Guests invited to the event include wealthy businessmen, successful corporation executives and
organization procurement teams, whose net assets are estimated over 50 million yuan ($7.4 million).
"We are going to buy two business jets this time," said Li Nonghe, Secretary General of the World
Chinese Business Advancement Association. He showed his feelings of pride as Chinese are becoming
richer to the point of owning jets.
But, unlike these potential jet buyers, Zhang Yue, CEO of Broad Air Conditioning Co. Ltd, has given up
such a luxurious privilege.
He said one tree absorbs 18.3 kilograms of carbon dioxide every year; the carbon dioxide my business jet
produces from a 3,000-kilometer trip between Changsha and Beijing equals to the amount absorbed by
eight trees for 60 years.
"Since I've known these figures, taking trips on my jet belonged to a past," said Zhang, who used to be a
supporter of corporate jets, but his two jets have been left unused.
China's luxury goods tax policy was set up in 1995 and was amended in 2006, where private jet is still
not included as one of the 14 items.
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