An aircraft handmade
by Hong Kong students will be ready to take to the skies in a year, but
the government's refusal to inspect it and to issue a permit means it
may be grounded indefinitely.
The two-seater plane, now in
its final stage of assembly in a classroom at St Paul's Convent School,
is a collaborative effort between Cathay Pacific pilot Hank Cheng
Chor-hang and students over four years.
Cheng, a Hongkonger
educated in the US, said he contacted the Civil Aviation Department
before he bought the HK$1.4 million kit from the US in 2008.
But the government's stance was not clear until a stern refusal to inspect the plane in May.
The department cited busy traffic at Hong Kong International Airport as a reason for declining Cheng's request.
But
he said: "We just need to leave and land in the airport. For the rest
of the time, we'll be out in the air. I can't see why we can't
test-fly," he said. A plane needs to go through 25 hours of test-flying
before it is considered safe.
The team could skip the red tape by
shipping the plane elsewhere for registration and then returning it to
Hong Kong, but Cheng is reluctant to do so.
"It's Hong Kong's responsibility to certify a plane that is made here," he said.
Other air fields in Hong Kong are unsuitable for the test flight, including Shek Kong because of nearby residential buildings.
The
department confirmed it received Cheng's application to register the
plane and for a "permit to fly", but said the airport was too busy. "The
[airport] is not a suitable location ... and hence there is no point in
conducting any inspections on the aircraft," said a spokeswoman.
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