With a US-led attack on Iraq likely to be launched today, local passenger airlines, air cargo carriers and shipping companies are on high alert and mapping alternative routes to avoid the possible war zone.
Both China Airlines Co (華航) and EVA Airways Corp (長榮航空) said yesterday that they may re-route their flights to London, Vienna and Amsterdam -- which fly over the Middle East -- to fly north of Iran or south of Saudi Arabia.
Re-routing of flights will extend flying time by 1.5 hours, the airlines said.
"Re-routing costs are expected to be a burden [on the company] depending on the rising oil and insurance prices as well as the area the war will involve," said Nieh Kuo-wei (聶國維), EVA's spokesman.
EVA currently operates 10 passenger flights and 12 cargo routes per week that overfly the Middle East while China Airlines operates two passenger flights and one cargo route that may also be affected by the war.
Hong Kong's Civil Aviation Department approved applications from eight airlines to levy a fuel surcharge for three months after oil prices rose. But domestic airlines have no plans so far to follow suit.
"We'll closely watch the war's development before any pricing changes can be decided," Nieh said.
But Calvin Chen (陳程坤), an analyst with Compass Securities Co, yesterday said that economic hard times will make it difficult for airlines to hike prices even if there is a war.
"To the disadvantage of the airline and shipping sectors, they may have to absorb the extra costs of fuel prices themselves instead of asking customers to pay," he said.
It appears that local shipping companies and express freight companies will be less impacted by the war.
Evergreen Marine Corp (長榮海 運) yesterday said that the company currently operates two routes to the Persian Gulf that make stopovers at Saudi Arabia's Dammam port. If the war is restricted to Iraq, there will be no impact on its operations, the company said, adding that cargo containers will be docked at the Dubai port if the Dammam port is affected by the war.
Yangming Marine Transport Corp (
Wan Hai Lines (萬海航運) serves nearly 20 ports in the Middle East. The company's spokesperson was not available yesterday to comment on its contingency plans.
Express companies including Federal Express Corp, DHL Taiwan Corp (洋基運通) and UPS Worldwide Logistics yesterday said their services would not be interrupted unless they are barred from the region.
RUN IT BACK: A succesful first project working with hyperscalers to design chips encouraged MediaTek to start a second project, aiming to hit stride in 2028 MediaTek Inc (聯發科), the world’s biggest smartphone chip supplier, yesterday said it is engaging a second hyperscaler to help design artificial intelligence (AI) accelerators used in data centers following a similar project expected to generate revenue streams soon. The first AI accelerator project is to bring in US$1 billion revenue next year and several billion US dollars more in 2027, MediaTek chief executive officer Rick Tsai (蔡力行) told a virtual investor conference yesterday. The second AI accelerator project is expected to contribute to revenue beginning in 2028, Tsai said. MediaTek yesterday raised its revenue forecast for the global AI accelerator used
TEMPORARY TRUCE: China has made concessions to ease rare earth trade controls, among others, while Washington holds fire on a 100% tariff on all Chinese goods China is effectively suspending implementation of additional export controls on rare earth metals and terminating investigations targeting US companies in the semiconductor supply chain, the White House announced. The White House on Saturday issued a fact sheet outlining some details of the trade pact agreed to earlier in the week by US President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) that aimed to ease tensions between the world’s two largest economies. Under the deal, China is to issue general licenses valid for exports of rare earths, gallium, germanium, antimony and graphite “for the benefit of US end users and their suppliers
Dutch chipmaker Nexperia BV’s China unit yesterday said that it had established sufficient inventories of finished goods and works-in-progress, and that its supply chain remained secure and stable after its parent halted wafer supplies. The Dutch company suspended supplies of wafers to its Chinese assembly plant a week ago, calling it “a direct consequence of the local management’s recent failure to comply with the agreed contractual payment terms,” Reuters reported on Friday last week. Its China unit called Nexperia’s suspension “unilateral” and “extremely irresponsible,” adding that the Dutch parent’s claim about contractual payment was “misleading and highly deceptive,” according to a statement
The Chinese government has issued guidance requiring new data center projects that have received any state funds to only use domestically made artificial intelligence (AI) chips, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters. In recent weeks, Chinese regulatory authorities have ordered such data centers that are less than 30 percent complete to remove all installed foreign chips, or cancel plans to purchase them, while projects in a more advanced stage would be decided on a case-by-case basis, the sources said. The move could represent one of China’s most aggressive steps yet to eliminate foreign technology from its critical infrastructure amid a