Carrying Chinese goods through airports still popular with continent’s businesspeople
It was 5 pm, and Saada Masood Ally Seif, a Tanzanian passenger in her 20s, was waiting in the departure hall of Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport, though her flight would not take off for another seven hours.
An African businessman (first from right) tries out fresh fruit juice during an international fruit expo held in Guangzhou, capital of South China's Guangdong Province on June 27. (Photo: VCG)
"There will be a huge amount of baggage to be checked in, and I want to be the first in the queue," Saada said, eyeing three pieces of baggage beside her, dwarfed by piles of large baggage from other passengers.
Saada would take a midnight flight from Guangzhou, capital of South China's Guangdong Province, to Tanzania's biggest city Dar es Salaam, an air route she has taken many times over the past five years.
In Dar es Salaam, she runs a baby clothes shop in Kariakoo Market, the largest distribution center of Chinese goods in East Africa, and Guangzhou is her source of supply.
"Every time we come to Guangzhou, we take home as many goods as our check-in luggage can take," she said.
For this trip, Saada ordered five large boxes of baby clothes, a majority of which had been shipped to Tanzania by sea before her departure. She took the rest home by air.
In recent years, fast-growing China-African trade has become a vigorous part of the global trade system, with China being the largest trading partner of Africa for years. According to Chinese customs figures, bilateral trade in the first half of 2018 reached $99.8 billion, a year-on-year increase of 17.3 percent.
In this huge trade system, ordinary people like Saada play an important role.
When night falls, three check-in counters at Guangzhou airport brace for peak passenger check-ins flying to Africa.
Many are carrying baggage filled with Chinese goods.
For many African businesspeople, Guangzhou is the most attractive place for buying goods. And for countries without ports, shipping back Chinese goods by air is still profitable, according to Vincent Ongas, a manager at Kenya Airways.
"A lot of African people like the trade environment in Guangzhou. Some travel between Guangzhou and Africa every week," Ongas said. "Kenya Airways uses Boeing 787s to fly the Guangzhou-Nairobi route. Usually among the more than 400 passengers on board, there are 60 to 100 businesspeople."
"At the Guangzhou airport alone, there are more than 150 such traveling African traders shipping a large number of Made-in-China goods back home daily," said Ma Jiangnan, a customs officer at Baiyun Airport.
"With Africa's increasing demand for Chinese goods, more African buyers in China have abandoned random small procurement and turned to bulk purchases," said Liu Jisen, executive vice president of the Institute for African Studies at Guangdong University of Foreign Studies.
"Yet for new traders, the channel of passenger-carried cargo still has a certain appeal."
Guangzhou airport now has six air routes to Africa, including three direct routes and three transit routes.
Every week, there are 34 flights between China and Africa, with an annual passenger throughput of 650,000.
Kenya Airways and Ethiopian Airlines offer excess baggage coupons for frequent passengers, which are priced between $80 and $200 for each piece. With both free and paid baggage, a passenger can carry up to 300 kilograms of checked-in luggage.
"We are using wide-body passenger aircraft. Our passengers who have made round trips for a certain [amount of] times can get free air tickets," Ongas said. "Since 2013, we have increased the number of flights from four round trips to seven round trips a week. But in the peak period, passengers still need to buy tickets at least one week in advance."
According to Guangzhou Customs, more than 30,000 tons of goods have been exported this way since 2014. At peak times, more than 30 tons of goods are cleared daily.
"It's good to do business in Guangzhou. You have a lot of choices and can buy at a satisfactory price," said Saada, who lined up for boarding at midnight. "If business is good, I will be back six times like last year, maybe even more."