|   |
CAN
|
|   |
ZGGG
|
|   |
public
|
|   |
Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport Co Ltd
|
|   |
ceremony: , 2004
|
|   |
Guangzhou, China
|
|   |
28 Kilometre s (174 Mile s)
|
|   |
36
|
|   |
11
|
|
|   |
02L/20R
|
|   |
11,811
|
|   |
3,600
|
|   |
Paved
|
|
|   |
02R/20L
|
|   |
12,467
|
|   |
3,800
|
|   |
Paved
|
|
() is the main airport of Guangzhou , the capital of the province of Guangdong , People's Republic Of China . The airport's IATA Airport Code is '''CAN''', reflecting Guangdong's former romanization ''Canton''. Its ICAO Code is '''ZGGG'''. Both airport codes were inherited from the Previous Guangzhou Airport . The airport is the main hub of China Southern Airlines .
The current airport in to the airport is also under construction.
"Baiyun" (白云) means "white clouds" in Chinese . The airport is also referred to as "New Baiyun" to distinguish it from the previous version, but this is not a part of the official name.
- Runways: 2 (3800 m and 3600 m), room reserved for a third one
- Aprons: 66
- Current capacity: 27 million passengers per year
- Planned capacity in 2010: 80 million passengers per year
- Cargo capacity: 1 million tonnes
- Planned cargo capacity in 2010: 2.5 million tonnes
- Destinations: 100 (mostly domestic)
- Branch airports: Shantou , Meizhou , Zhanjiang
- Planned branch airports: Weizhou , Zhaoqing
- Air China (Beijing, Chengdu, Chongqing, Sydney)
- Air France (Paris-Charles de Gaulle)
- Air Philippines (Manila)
- All Nippon Airways (Tokyo-Narita)
- Asiana Airlines (Seoul-Incheon)
- Batavia Air (Jakarta)
- China Airlines (Taipei-Chiang Kai Shek; part of the Three Links )
- China Eastern Airlines (Shanghai-Pudong)
- China Southern Airlines (Aksu, Almaty, Altay, Amsterdam, Bangkok, Beihai, Beijing, Bishkek, Busan, Changchun, Changde, Changsha, Changzhi, Changzhou, Chengdu, Cheongju, Chongqing, Daegu, Dali, Dalian, Dali City, Dandong, Datong, Diqing, Dubai, Fukuoka, Fuzhou, Guilin, Haikou, Hangzhou, Hanoi, Harbin, Hefei, Hiroshima, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, Hotan, Huangshan, Islamabad, Jakarta, Jilin, Jinghong, Jinjiang, Kashi, Khabarovsk, Korla, Kuala Lumpur, Kunming, Kuqa, Lanzhou, Laoag City, Lhasa, Lianyungang, Lijiang City, Liuzhou, Los Angeles, Manila, Meixien, Melbourne, Moscow Sheremetyevo, Mudanjiang, Nagoya, Nanchang, Nanchong, Nanjing, Nanning, Nantong, Nanyang, Ningbo, Novosibirsk, Osaka-Kansai, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, Penang, Phnom Penh, Qiemo, Qiqihar, Sanya, Sapporo, Seoul-Incheon, Shanghai, Shantou, Sharjah, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Singapore, Sydney, Tachang, Taiyuan, Tianjin, Tokyo-Narita, Tongren, Toyama, Urumqi, Yining, Weihai, Wenzhou, Wuhan, Wuxi, Wuyishan, Wuzhou, Xiamen, Xi'an, Xining, Xuzhou, Yancheng, Yanji, Yantai, Yinchuan, Yiwu, Zhanjiang, Zhengzhou, Zhuhai)
- Dragonair (Hong Kong)
- Ethiopian Airlines (Addis Ababa, Bangkok)
- EVA Air (Taipei-Chiang Kai Shek; part of the Three Links )
- Finnair (Helsinki)
- Garuda Indonesia (Jakarta)
- Hong Kong Express (Hong Kong)
- Japan Airlines (Nagoya, Osaka-Kansai, Tokyo-Narita)
- Jatayu Airlines (Jakarta)
- Kenya Airways (Dubai, Nairobi)
- Lufthansa (Frankfurt, Manila)
- Malaysia Airlines (Kota Kinabalu, Kuala Lumpur, Kuching)
- Northwest Airlines (Honolulu, Tokyo-Narita)
- Orient Thai Airways (Bangkok)
- Singapore Airlines (Singapore)
- Thai Airways (Bangkok)
- Vietnam Airlines (Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City)
|