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Ürümqi Diwopu International Airport (IATA: URC, ICAO: ZWWW) is an international airport serving Ürümqi, the capital of Northwest China‘s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. It is located in the Diwopu township of Xinshi district , 16 km (9.9 mi) northwest of downtown Ürümqi.
Civil airports of Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau. This is a list of public airports in the People's Republic of China grouped by provincial level division and sorted by main city or county served. It includes civil airports and certified general airports, [1] but excludes filed general airports, defunct airports and military air bases.
"United Nations Code for Trade and Transport Locations". UN/LOCODE 2011-2. UNECE. 28 February 2012. - includes IATA codes; Aviation Safety Network - IATA and ICAO airport codes; Chinese airport list and search page on feeyo.com Archived 2017-05-16 at the Wayback Machine (in Chinese)
The list shows airports that are served by China Southern Airlines as part of its scheduled passenger and cargo services. The list includes the city, country, the codes of the International Air Transport Association (IATA airport code) and the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO airport code), and the airport's name, with the airline's hubs, cargo and focus cities, as well as ...
China is the second largest civil aviation market in the world after the United States. Six new airports entered the top 100 of busiest Chinese airports by passenger traffic, being Huizhou Pingtan Airport the busiest between the newcomers in 2017. The 100 busiest airports in China in 2017 ordered by total passenger traffic, according to the ...
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Fuyun Keketuohai (Koktokay) Airport (IATA: FYN, ICAO: ZWFY) is an airport serving Fuyun County in Altay Prefecture, Xinjiang, China. The old airport of Fuyun was built in 1965, located 38 kilometres (24 mi) from the county seat. It served a single route to Ürümqi until it was canceled in 1994, after the closing of the Koktokay mine. [1]
Ürümqi [a] is the capital of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in Northwestern China. [5] With a census population of 4 million in 2020, Ürümqi is the second-largest city in China's northwestern interior after Xi'an, as well as the largest in Central Asia in terms of population.