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XiamenAir

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Airline of China; based in Xiamen, Fujian

XiamenAir
厦门航空
XiamenAirBoeing 787-9 in 2018
IATAICAOCall sign
MFCXAXIAMEN AIR
FoundedJuly 25, 1984; 41 years ago (1984-07-25)
Hubs
Secondary hubs
Focus cities
Frequent-flyer programEgret Miles
AllianceSkyTeam[2]
Subsidiaries
Fleet size172
Destinations103[3]
Parent companyChina Southern Airlines (51%)
Headquarters22 Dailiao Road,Xiamen,Fujian[4]
Key peopleXie Bing (president &CEO)
Zhao Dong (chairman)
Websitewww.xiamenair.com
XiamenAir
Simplified Chinese厦门航空
Traditional Chinese廈門航空
Hanyu PinyinXiàmén Hángkōng
Literal meaningXiamen Airlines
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXiàmén Hángkōng
Southern Min
HokkienPOJE-mng Hang-khong

Xiamen Airlines (/ʃ(j)ɑːˈmɛn/sh(y)ah-MEN) (branded asXiamenAir) is an airline based inXiamen,Fujian, China. XiamenAir has its northern headquarters inBeijing and eight branches inFuzhou,Hangzhou,Tianjin,Hunan,Beijing,Quanzhou,Chongqing andShanghai, and two subsidiaries inHebei Airlines (99.47% shareholding) andJiangxi Airlines (60% shareholding, based on the former Xiamen AirlinesNanchang Branch). Founded on 25 July 1984, XiamenAir is the first airline in China to operate independently as an enterprise. It was established as a joint venture between the Shanghai Administration ofCivil Aviation Administration of China, Xiamen Special Economic Zone Construction Development Company (now Xiamen C&D Group) and Fujian Investment Enterprise Company. The shareholders areChina Southern Airlines Corporation (55%), Xiamen C&D Group (34%) and Fujian Investment and Development Group (11%). The current chairman of XiamenAir is Zhao Dong and the general manager is Wang Zhixue.[5][6]

XiamenAirBoeing 787-8registered B-2761 taking off fromTokyo Narita International Airport

XiamenAir operates more than 320 domestic and international routes fromXiamen Gaoqi International Airport,Beijing Daxing International Airport,Fuzhou Changle International Airport andHangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport, with 3,500 to 4,000 flights per week and carries nearly 25 million passengers per year. XiamenAir's logo is "A Heron Flying High", a well-known trademark in China, and its frequent flyer program is the XiamenAir White Egret Frequent Flyer Program. The airline features in-flight announcements in Mandarin and English, but also in Minnan, which are broadcast by Xia Hui, a former broadcaster for the Central People's Radio station and Xiamen Broadcasting Company.[7][8]

XiamenAir is the 19th member of the international airline allianceSkyTeam and the first airline in mainland China to join one of the world's three major airline alliances other than the three major state-owned airlines (includingChina Southern, which withdrew from SkyTeam on 1 January 2019) andShanghai Airlines, which joined the alliance as an affiliate member, and the fourth full member of SkyTeam in Greater China (the first three beingChina Southern,China Eastern, andChina Airlines, of which China Southern withdrew from the alliance on 1 January 2019).[9][10]

History

[edit]

Xiamen Civil Aviation

[edit]
ABoeing 737-200 operated by Xiamen Airlines

The history of Xiamen's aviation industry can be traced back to the Xiamen Wutong Civil Aviation Academy in 1928, which was one of the only three aviation academies in theRepublic of China at that time.[11]

In 1929, the Zhangxia Navy established the Zengcuo Aun Naval Airport in Xiamen, and in 1932, the China Airlines Xiamen Office, a joint venture between China and theUnited States, operated air transportation to various places. Later, the airport was abandoned due to theJapanese invasion of China.[12]

In 1941, during the Second World War, the Japanese who occupied Xiamen built Gaoqi Airport in the east of Gaoqi Village for both military and civilian use. From 5 December of the same year, first commercial flight between Xiamen andTaipei took off and landed at Gaoqi Airport.[13]

AfterJapan's defeat and surrender, Gaoqi Airport was taken over by theNationalist government and converted to a civilian airport on 1 November 1947. On 24 August 1949, the last scheduled Xiamen to Taipei flight took off from Gaoqi Airport to Taipei and then was discontinued (the route was not converted to a regular service until 2006, when holiday charters resumed, and after December 2008).[14] For the next 33 years, Xiamen's aviation industry was disrupted and Gaoqi Airport was abandoned after a brief period of military use.[13]

After the founding of thePeople's Republic of China, Xiamen was in a state of war for a long time and had no civil aviation airport of its own because of its location on the front of the Taiwan Strait. At that time, the citizens of Xiamen could only travel by boat or train.[13][15] This contradiction was even more prominent after the establishment ofXiamen Special Economic Zone. On 10 January 1982, theCentral Military Commission and theState Council approved the construction ofXiamen Gaoqi Airport. In October of the following year.[13]

However, the airport had no airline that operated as a hub, and still could not solve the issue of lack of capacity. At the opening ceremony of Xiamen Airport, Zhang Ru, Vice Governor of Fujian Province Government, proposed to Shen Tu, Director of theCivil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC), who attended the opening ceremony, that the CAAC and Fujian Province cooperate to establish an airline company, and received support on the spot. Immediately afterwards, the CPC Fujian Provincial Committee assigned Vice Governor Zhang Ru and Vice Mayor of Xiamen City Xiang Zhen to work with Director Wang Dao of the Planning Department of CAAC to study the establishment of an airline company.[16]

Founding

[edit]

On 16 October 1983, the chairman ofAloha Airlines, Chen Qing who is a Chinese American, visited Xiamen to study the plan of establishing a Sino-foreign joint venture airline in Xiamen. Wu Zhongliang, who was involved in the establishment of Xiamen Airlines at that time, recalled that Aloha Airlines even had the intention of moving its base to Xiamen at that time.[15][17]

On 10 January 1984, the Xiamen Municipal Government drafted the "Conceptual Plan and Opinions on Sino-foreign Joint Venture to Operate China Xiamen Special Zone United Airlines Co. Ltd." On 25 January, representatives from Fujian Province and Xiamen City went to the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) for project report, mentioning that priority would be given to joint undertakings by CAAC and Fujian Province as long as aircraft and funds were guaranteed. Subsequently, the CAAC, Fujian Province and Xiamen City held a special meeting on the proposed joint venture airline proposal, and finally rejected the joint venture airline proposal drawn up by the Xiamen City Government on the basis of air rights and other issues.[15]

On 2 March 1984, the Civil Aviation Administration of China and Fujian Provincial Government jointly issued the "Approval of Agreement on Joint Venture Operation of Xiamen Airlines Co. Ltd.[15] Xiamen Air Co. Ltd was officially established on 25 July 1984, as the first comprehensive local airline company and the first joint venture between the central and local governments.Gaoqi Airport have being chosen for the base of this new funded airline.[15]

At the early years of the airline, Xiamen Airlines set itself as aregional airline, but the investment of 20 millionRMB from the three shareholders was not available at the beginning of its establishment, and it only registered with a bank account with 5,000 RMB, without any aircraft and livery.[15]

On 5 January 1985, 9:55 a.m., awet-leasedBoeing 737 airliner of Xiamen Airlines landed safely atBeijing Capital Airport at 12:27 p.m. after 2 hours and 32 minutes of flight time, which was the first route opened by Xiamen Airlines. In the afternoon, the company's second route, Xiamen-Guangzhou, was also officially opened, with the participation ofJiang Ping, vice mayor of Xiamen, and leaders of Xiamen Airlines, etc. On 10 January, the company opened its third route, Xiamen-Shanghai. In these routes, the aircraft of Civil Aviation Administration of Shanghai operates Shanghai-Xiamen and Xiamen-Guangzhou routes once per week; the aircraft of Civil Aviation Administration of Guangzhou (the predecessor ofChina Southern Airlines) operates Guangzhou-Xiamen, Xiamen-Beijing routes and Xiamen-Hong Kong charter flights once per week. On 12 February 1985, Xiamen Airlines leased its first 737-200 aircraft, and on 18 December 1985, the third meeting of the first board of directors and the first meeting of the second board of directors of Xiamen Airlines decided to transfer the shares of the Civil Aviation Administration of Shanghai for Xiamen Airlines to the Civil Aviation Administration of Guangzhou, with the same ratio of capital contribution from each party. The agreement of joint venture operation of Xiamen Airlines by the three shareholders and the articles of association of Xiamen Airlines were amended and submitted for approval and became effective on 1 January 1986. On 16 November, the first 737-200 aircraft was transferred from Guangzhou to Xiamen as the base of Xiamen Airlines. In November 1987, Xiamen Airlines introduced the second 737-200 aircraft, and in this year, Xiamen Airlines reversed the operating loss of the first three years and made a profit of 3.17 million RMB for the first time.[18][16]

Expansion

[edit]
ABoeing 757-200 in Xiamen Airlines' first generation livery landing atXiamen Gaoqi International Airport
Xiamen AirlinesBoeing 737-800 in a second generation livery
XiamenAirBoeing 787-9 Dreamliner

Xiamen Airlines has made innovative breakthroughs in corporate organization, operation and management, and transportation services. At the time of its establishment, Xiamen Airlines was positioned as an independently accounted, self-financing limited liability company. In 1989, reforms were made to the organization, personnel management, labor distribution, housing system, medical insurance, employee benefits, etc. In 1997, the contract system for employees was implemented.[19]

On 16 November 1986, the first aircraft of Xiamen Airlines was transferred from Guangzhou to Xiamen to start its operation. In the same year, Xiamen Airlines bid farewell to its losses and opened the curtain on 27 years of continuous profitability.[16] On 8 August 1988, Xiamen Airlines took over the ownership of its first new passenger aircraft from Boeing (Xiamen Airlines had previously operated old aircraft sold to Xiamen Airlines by China Southern Airlines and Southwest Airlines). The aircraft was a Boeing 737-25C Advanced (registration number B-2524), the last Boeing 737 classic airliner produced by Boeing Civil Aircraft. The aircraft was retired from service in 2003 and resold toBlue Dart Express.[16]

In 1991, theGeneral Administration of Civil Aviation (GACA) approved Xiamen Airlines to adopt "Blue Sky and White Heron" as its corporate logo. In the same year, the Civil Aviation Administration separated the government and enterprises and established China Southern Airlines, and the shares held by the Civil Aviation Guangzhou Administration were transferred to China Southern Airlines.[15]

On 12 August 1992, Xiamen Airlines took delivery of its firstBoeing 757-200 aircraft, registered as B-2819, which was also the 100th aircraft delivered to the Chinese civil aviation system byBoeing. This aircraft was retired in 2008 and sold toBlue Dart Aviation who converted the aircraft to a cargo plane.[20]

In 2000, Xiamen Airlines launched the service between Xiamen andBangkok, which was the first international service of Xiamen Airlines and operated as MF897/8.[21]

AnAirbus A321neo of XiamenAir

On 25 July 2012, Xiamen Airlines changed its VI logo for the first time from "Blue Sky with White Heron" to "One Heron Flying High" and the aircraft painting theme was changed from "Reform Music" to "Sea and Sky". The theme of the aircraft painting was changed from "Reform Music" to "Sea and Sky". To upgrade the logo of Xiamen Airlines, the Chinese design master Chen Youjian and TEAGUE, the design team appointed by Boeing, were invited to design, revise and prove the new corporate logo, hence the rebranding to XiamenAir.[22][23]

On 1 December 2018, XiamenAir's last Boeing 757 (No. B-2868) was retired after its last flight fromShanghai Hongqiao-Xiamen, and since then there have been no Boeing 757 passenger aircraft inGreater China.[24]

As China's aviation sector developed, the airline expanded to regional Asian destinations while the delivery of wide-bodyBoeing 787 Dreamliners permitted the airline to offer long-distance services. The airline's first intercontinental expansion was toEurope, which commenced with anAmsterdam service from 26 July 2015, and aParis service from 11 December 2018.[25] Services toSydney followed from 30 November 2015,[26] andMelbourne a year later. The airline's first North American service, toVancouver, was launched on 26 July 2016.[27] XiamenAir's first US service was toSeattle, followed byLos Angeles and thenNew York.[citation needed]

By early 2020, the airline had set up bases atFuzhou Changle International Airport,Nanchang Changbei International Airport,Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport,Tianjin Binhai International Airport,Changsha Huanghua International Airport,Beijing Daxing International Airport (moved fromBeijing Capital International Airport in 2020),Quanzhou Jinjiang International Airport,Chongqing Jiangbei International Airport andShanghai Hongqiao International Airport.[28]

On 17 November of the same year,SkyTeam officially announced the details of XiamenAir's membership in the alliance and signed a letter of intent to join the alliance in Rome, Italy. On 21 November 2012, XiamenAir officially became the 19th member of SkyTeam and added three new hubs to the alliance—Xiamen,Fuzhou andHangzhou—making it the first airline in China to join one of the three global airline alliances, in addition to the three major state-owned airlines (of which China Southern, the parent company of XiamenAir, withdrew from SkyTeam on 1 January 2019) andShanghai Airlines, which joined the alliance as a subsidiary member.[9][10]

Destinations

[edit]
XiamenAirBoeing 737-800 in SkyTeam livery
XiamenAir Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner in a specialUnited Nations Sustainable Living livery

Alliance

[edit]

On 17 November 2011, XiamenAir signed amemorandum of understanding with theairline alliance SkyTeam. On 21 November 2012, the airline was officially welcomed as the 19th member ofSkyTeam.[29]

Codeshare agreements

[edit]

XiamenAir hascodeshare agreements with the following airlines:[30]

Interline agreements

[edit]

XiamenAir hasinterline agreements with the following airlines:

Joint venture agreements

[edit]

XiamenAir has joint venture agreements with the following airlines:

Fleet

[edit]

As of December 2023, the fleet size (including subsidiaries Jiangxi Airlines and Hebei Airlines) reached 156 aircraft, with an average aircraft age of 9 years.[citation needed]

With XiamenAir formally introducing 15Airbus A321neos under operating leases in October 2022, it ended a 37-year record of an all-Boeing fleet since its foundation and started a new era of an "Airbus-Boeing" fleet.[43][44][45][46]

As of September 2025[update], XiamenAir operates the following aircraft:[47][44][45][48][46]

XiamenAir fleet
AircraftIn serviceOrdersPassengersNotes
FJYTotal
Airbus A320neo20TBADeliveries from 2024.[49][50]
Airbus A321neo17188200208[49][50]
Boeing 737-70048120128
Boeing 737-8001138156164
162170
184184
Boeing 737 MAX 8275184184Deliveries started in May 2018.[51]
Boeing 737 MAX 1010TBAOrder from theparent company.[52]
Boeing 787-86418215237
Boeing 787-9630257287Order transferred from theparent company.[53]
XiamenAir Cargo fleet
Boeing 737-800BCF1Cargo[54]
Total17453

Cabin services

[edit]

Currently, XiamenAir provides first-class services with business class seats on domestic routes in China as usual. On international and regional routes, business class and economy class services are offered as usual.[55] The Boeing 787-8 has 180-degree lie-flat seats in both First and Business Class and is equipped withPanasonic EX3 personal TV entertainment system with charging outlets and USB ports in all three classes. B-2760, B-2761, B-2762, and later787-9s have in-flight Wi-Fi access.[citation needed]

Former XiamenAir Boeing 757 first class cabin
Short haul Business Class on a XiamenAir Boeing 737
Short haul Economy Class on a XiamenAir Boeing 737

Accidents and incidents

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Xiamen Airlines"厦门航空有限公司 [Xiamen Airlines Co., Ltd.] (in Simplified Chinese). Xiamen Air. Retrieved10 July 2015.
  2. ^"Xiamen Airlines Joins SkyTeam" (Press release). SkyTeam. 17 November 2011. Retrieved10 July 2015.
  3. ^"Xiamen Airlines on ch-aviation.com".ch-aviation.com. Retrieved21 November 2023.
  4. ^"Airline Membership".IATA. Archived fromthe original on 11 July 2015.
  5. ^厦门航空有限公司最新校园招聘信息-智联招聘官网 [Xiamen Airlines Co., Ltd.'s latest campus recruitment information - Zhaopin.com].xiaoyuan.zhaopin.com (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved16 January 2023.
  6. ^民航休闲小站.www.xmyzl.com (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved16 January 2023.
  7. ^精彩回顾 ▏ 闽南方言夏令营 [Highlights].Minnan Dialect Summer Camp (in Simplified Chinese). 27 August 2019. Archived fromthe original on 28 September 2021. Retrieved28 September 2021 – via Sohu.com.Our library has specially invited Ms. Cai Hui, who has made Minnan dialect broadcasts for Xiamen Airlines, Xiamen Airport,Xiamen Metro, cruise ships, etc., to bring you a high-quality Minnan dialect course.
  8. ^资深闽南话播音员蔡慧做客"百家村之声"网络电台 常坐厦航定听过她声音 [Veteran Minnan dialect announcer Cai Hui is a guest on the "Voice of Baijia Village" online radio station. Frequent Xiamen Airlines passengers will undoubtedly have heard her voice.].Xiamen Net (in Simplified Chinese). Sohu.com. 9 August 2016. Archived fromthe original on 12 March 2022. Retrieved28 September 2021.
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  12. ^曾厝垵机场 [Zengcuoan Airport].mnfeng.net (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved16 January 2023.
  13. ^abcd高崎机场 [Takasaki Airport].www.taiwan.cn (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved16 January 2023.
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  15. ^abcdefg人生路漫漫,白鹭常相伴:"中国民航发展缩影" 厦门航空初创记_湃客_澎湃新闻 [Life's long journey, always accompanied by egrets: "A microcosm of China's civil aviation development": Xiamen Airlines' early days].The Paper (in Simplified Chinese).Archived from the original on 7 August 2022. Retrieved7 August 2022.
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  20. ^送别757丨中国的航站楼前少了一位颜值担当 [Farewell to 757丨China's terminal is missing a handsome guy].Air Travel Circle (in Simplified Chinese). 1 December 2018. Retrieved16 January 2023.
  21. ^厦门航空(MF, CXA)|厦门航空公司|Xiamen Airlines - 航空公司-琪悦物流科技(中国)有限公司 [Xiamen Airlines (MF, CXA) | Airline | Qiyue Logistics Technology (China) Co., Ltd.].cheer56.com (in Simplified Chinese). Archived fromthe original on 16 January 2023. Retrieved16 January 2023.
  22. ^厦航新LOGO背后的战略 [The strategy behind the new logo].www.ce.cn (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved16 January 2023.
  23. ^厦航发布全新企业LOGO和飞机涂装 蓝天白鹭"变身"了_时政要闻_厦门_新闻中心_台海网 [Xiamen Airlines unveils new corporate logo and aircraft livery: A "transformation" of white egrets in the blue sky - Current Affairs - Xiamen - News Center].Taiwan Strait Net (in Simplified Chinese). Retrieved16 January 2023.
  24. ^中国民航最后4架波音757结束商业运营正式退役 [China Civil Aviation's last four Boeing 757s officially decommissioned commercial operations].CCA Online (in Simplified Chinese). 3 December 2018.Archived from the original on 16 January 2023. Retrieved16 January 2023.
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  32. ^"Our Codeshare Partners".Bangkok Airways.
  33. ^"G54019 Flight Status China Express Airlines: Chongqing to Lanzhou".
  34. ^ab"Xiamen Airlines Transit Accommodation Products".XiamenAir.
  35. ^"ITA Airways network".[dead link]
  36. ^"GJ8154 Flight Status Loong Airlines: Kashgar to Xi'an".www.airportia.com.
  37. ^"Qatar Airways and Xiamen Airlines Launch New Codeshare Partnership" (Press release). Qatar Airways. 9 September 2023.
  38. ^"Sichuan Airlines Adds A350 Beijing – Urumqi Service in NS25".AeroRoutes.
  39. ^"Airline Partners".Vietnam Airlines. Archived fromthe original on 21 January 2023. Retrieved10 July 2015.
  40. ^"Malindo goes global".The Star. 11 May 2017.
  41. ^"Fly with You Across the World: Xiamen Airlines Officially Launched the Air-rail Intermodal Transport Product".Xiamen Airlines.
  42. ^"Xiamen Air, Our SkyTeam partner".Virgin Atlantic.
  43. ^定了:厦航进15架A321NEO [Xiamen Airlines to receive 15 A321NEO aircraft].view.inews.qq.com (in Simplified Chinese). Archived fromthe original on 6 August 2022. Retrieved6 August 2022.
  44. ^ab"Seat Map".Xiamen Air.
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  46. ^ab"Orders & Deliveries". Boeing. Retrieved15 October 2025.
  47. ^"Global Airline Guide 2025 - Xiamen Airlines".Airliner World. September 2025. p. 56.
  48. ^"Orders and deliveries". Airbus. 3 April 2024. Retrieved21 August 2025.
  49. ^ab"China's Xiamen Airlines orders 40 A320neo".Ch-Aviation. 22 September 2022.
  50. ^ab"China's Xiamen Airlines takes delivery of its first A321neo".Ch-Aviation. 4 January 2023.
  51. ^"PICTURE: Xiamen Airlines takes first 737 Max 8".FlightGlobal. 23 May 2018.
  52. ^"China Southern Places Order for Xiamen Airlines".pilotcareercenter.com. Archived fromthe original on 28 September 2022. Retrieved16 January 2023.
  53. ^"向厦门航空转让3架B787-9飞机购买权项目外聘法律顾问服务成交结果公示" [China Southern Airlines Co., Ltd. provided external legal counsel for the transfer of the right to purchase three B787-9 aircraft to Xiamen Airlines Announcement of the results of the purchase transaction] (in Simplified Chinese). 中国南方航空股份有限公司. Archived fromthe original on 7 February 2024.
  54. ^"China's Xiamen Airlines takes first B737-800(BCF)".ch-aviation.com. Retrieved2 January 2024.
  55. ^存档副本 [Cabin service] (in Simplified Chinese). Archived fromthe original on 29 September 2012. Retrieved25 July 2012.
  56. ^"Hijacking Description, Xiamen Airlines Boeing 737-247 B-2510".Aviation Safety Network. Flight Safety Foundation. Retrieved10 July 2015.
  57. ^"Chinese Boeing 737 crash-lands at Manila airport".Business Insider. Retrieved8 September 2018.
  58. ^"Flightradar24.com - Live flight tracker!".Flightradar24. Retrieved8 September 2018.
  59. ^图片 厦航一客机在马尼拉机场降落时冲出跑道 乘客安全撤离_民航新闻_民航资源网 [Photo A Xiamen Airlines passenger plane ran off the runway while landing at Manila Airport. Passengers evacuated safely.].news.carnoc.com. Archived fromthe original on 25 February 2021. Retrieved16 August 2018.
  60. ^"Xiamen Air flight skids off NAIA runway; flights cancelled". Philippine Star - Philstar Global. 17 August 2018. Archived fromthe original on 13 April 2021. Retrieved18 August 2018.
  61. ^厦航客机马尼拉机场滑出跑道后续:133个航班取消 [Xiamen Airlines plane skidded off the runway at Manila Airport: 133 flights canceled] (in Simplified Chinese). Archived fromthe original on 17 April 2021. Retrieved19 August 2018.

External links

[edit]

Media related toXiamen Air at Wikimedia Commons

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  • Xiamen Construction and Development Group (34%)
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