Air China returns to fly from Rome Fiumicino to Beijing
Air China's direct flight between Rome Fiumicino and Beijing International Airport is back. After a three-year stop [...]
Direct flight of Air China between Rome Fiumicino and Beijing International Airport. After a three-year stop due to the pandemic, Air China has restored the historic service that has linked the capitals of Italy and China for more than 35 years.
The return of flights between the capitals
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With the start of the Iata summer schedule-and just days after the China's reopening to tourism and inbound and outbound travel - Air China celebrated the return of the connection at Gate E23 of Terminal 3 at Leonardo da Vinci Airport on March 27.
Air China operates the flight CA940 Rome-Beijing with four weekly frequencies-Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday-with scheduled departure from Rome Fiumicino at 8:55 p.m. and arrival in Beijing at 1 p.m. the following day.
The other flights between Italy and China
The route is operated with Airbus A350-900, configured with three classes of service: economy, premium and business. This connection is in addition to the route that Air China already operates to Fiumicino. With three weekly flights to Hangzhou With A330-300.
The airline also recently increased frequencies from Milan Malpensa: direct flights to Shanghai and to Beijing are now both daily. Also confirmed for the summer is the flight from Malpensa that sees an Air China plane take off three times a week with destination Wenzhou. In total, the Chinese airline offers 18 weekly direct flights between Italy and China.
Asian summer from Fiumicino
It will then be un summer full of opportunities for flights to Asia from Rome Fiumicino, In addition to the destinations available to Tokyo and Delhi, thanks to the increase in Ita Airways' flights already started at the end of 2022, there is a recovery of Greater China airlines.
Added to these is the restoration of the headed for Taipei operated 3 times a week. Rome will also be connected up to 2 times a day with Seoul through Korean Air and Asiana developments and 5 times a week with Singapore aboard Singapore Airlines which, will reach the maximum recorded supply on that route.