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SCMP Editorial

Editorial | Cathay’s recovery still a work in progress

  • Hong Kong’s flag carrier may have returned to profit but there is still much to be done to improve service quality and offer competitive airfares to attract customers

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A Cathay Pacific airplane taxis on the runway at Hong Kong International Airport. Photo: ZUMA Press Wire/dpa

The slow, steady climb back from pandemic doldrums continues for Cathay Pacific Airways. Hong Kong’s flag carrier revealed last week it carried 11.34 million passengers in the first eight months of the year.

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The figures are welcome news for the city and its beleaguered aviation industry, but Cathay must stay focused on addressing concerns about its service quality and airfares.

Passenger numbers from the first part of the year were 1,302 per cent higher than the same period in 2022, when many pandemic restrictions were still in place.

The figure is still only 46 per cent of the 24.4 million carried by Cathay Pacific and the now-closed Cathay Dragon in the first eight months of 2019.

Lavinia Lau Hoi-zee, the chief customer and commercial officer for the group, last Wednesday said that the business forecast was good and Cathay now had about 170 return services a week to 15 cities in mainland China alone.

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She said student travellers and major shopping events should help lift figures in the coming months.

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