1,600 Official Private Pilot Licensees 
Currently In China 
As  Jing Daily has noted before, as luxury cars and villas have become the norm  for the wealthiest of the wealthy in China, many have looked to buy another, far  more exclusive, ultra-luxury item: a private jet. Although China has nearly 100  legally registered private jets, it is believed that there are 300 or more  currently criss-crossing the country (either legally or illegally). Counted  among China’s burgeoning jet-set are scores of business execs and entrepreneurs,  Hong Kong media mogul Run Run Shaw, actor and comedian Zhao Benshan and  celebrities like filmmaker Feng Xiaogang, actress Fan  Bingbing and actor Chen  Daoming.
But with the development of China’s private aviation industry has come  another status symbol: a pilot’s license. Despite pricey training costs, which  range between 60,000-80,000 yuan (US$9,278-12,371) — upwards of three times the country’s annual per capita GDP —  ChinaLuxus noted this week that 1,600 budding pilots have  already obtained official licenses in China, with the site suggesting that the  actual number is far higher. Sort of a frightening prospect, but someone has to  pilot the much-discussed “black flights” taking place across the country.
At present, provinces like Heilongjiang, Guangdong and Hainan have opened  low-altitude flight space, with much of China projected to make more airspace  become available as early as 2015. Despite these restrictions, demand for pilot  training has increased gradually since the opening of China’s first private  flight school in the 1990s, with wealthier individuals in the country’s top-tier  cities now signing up for lessons as a recreational or lifestyle activity.
But getting an official license is neither cheap nor easy. At the Civil  Aviation Flight University of China in Guanghan, Sichuan province, students pay  70,000 yuan (US$10,825) in training fees, and must complete 40-45 days of  continuous study as well as more than 35 hours of actual flight time. Still, the  university’s regulations and comparatively high cost of training, as well as the  broader regulations that accredited pilots must go through before their first  licensed flight, may partly explain the proliferation of “unofficial”  pilots. According to industry  sources, before flying legally, new pilots must take three steps, as  proscribed by civil aviation law: First pilots need an official license issued  by the Civil Aviation Administration of China; Second, pilots need a secondary  pilot’s license issued by “relevant departments” in their region; Finally, a  pilot needs to get permission for their flight plan from all air traffic control  departments.
Via jingdaily
Luxury News 
Golden Choice by Lux Creative International
Golden Choice by Lux Creative International
 

 
