Yushu Batang Airport

Summary

Yushu Batang Airport (IATA: YUS, ICAO: ZLYS) is an airport serving Yushu City in Qinghai Province, China. It is located 18 kilometers to the south of the city center, Gyêgu, at the 3,890 meters elevation about the sea level, which makes it the highest civilian airport in Qinghai Province,[1] and one of the highest in the world.

Yushu Batang Airport

玉树巴塘机场
Summary
Airport typePublic
LocationYushu, Qinghai, China
Elevation AMSL3,890 m / 12,762 ft
Coordinates32°50′21″N 97°02′20″E / 32.83917°N 97.03889°E / 32.83917; 97.03889
Map
YUS is located in Qinghai
YUS
YUS
Location of airport in Qinghai
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
10/28 3,800 12,467 Concrete
Statistics (2021)
Passengers374,561
Aircraft movements4,584
Cargo (metric tons)944.4
Source:[1]

The construction of the airport started in 2007.[2] The first aircraft landed at the new airport on May 29, 2009, and the airport was officially opened on August 1, 2009.[1]

Yushu Batang Airport has a 3,800 meter-long runway, and can receive A319 aircraft. The passenger terminal is designed to serve up to 80,000 passengers per year.[1] According to the CAAC statistics, the airport served 7,484 passengers during 2009, the first (incomplete) year of its operation.[3]

The airport played an important role in the delivery of rescue personnel and relief supplies to the area affected by the 2010 Yushu earthquake. The facility was re-opened at noon on the day of the earthquake (Wednesday, April 14), and the first flight with personnel and supplies of the China International Earthquake Rescue Team landed there at 8 pm the same day.[4]

Airlines and destinations edit

AirlinesDestinations
Beijing Capital Airlines Beijing–Daxing, Xining
China Eastern Airlines Chengdu–Tianfu, Xi'an, Xining
Tibet Airlines Xining

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Yushu Batang Airport officially opened on August 1st, 2009
  2. ^ First civil aviation airplane successfully landed in Yushu Airport in Qinghai
  3. ^ 民航机场业务量 Archived July 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (Civil Airports Operations Volume), at the CAAC site [This is apparently an HTML file, not an Excel file, despite its extension].
  4. ^ Airport vital lifeline to relief effort. By Xin Dingding (China Daily), 2010-04-15