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Oct 23, 2025

Hong Kong Airport Shuts North Runway to Salvage Crashed Cargo Jet, Forcing Widespread Flight Re-routing

Hong Kong Airport Shuts North Runway to Salvage Crashed Cargo Jet, Forcing Widespread Flight Re-routing
Hong Kong International Airport (HKIA) suspended operations on its busy north runway at 8 a.m. on 23 October after a Turkish-registered cargo aircraft overshot the strip and broke in two at the shoreline earlier in the week. Two salvage barges—Nan Tian Xiang and Nan Tian Peng—sailed down from Guangzhou overnight, bringing an 80-strong specialist team of divers, riggers and engineers tasked with hoisting the wreckage in a multi-day, tide-dependent lift. The Airport Authority warned that the closure would last “several days,” compelling airlines to consolidate schedules on the south runway and trim peak-hour frequencies.

While passenger terminals remained open, more than 120 flights were pre-emptively retimed or swapped for smaller aircraft to maintain separation minima on the single-runway operation. Freight forwarders expressed concern that the disruption could snarl end-of-month export flows; HKIA handles the world’s largest international cargo throughput and already faced capacity constraints following September’s Typhoon Ragasa.

Insurers estimate hull and liability claims could top US$150 million, given damage to navigational aids, apron lighting and the need to dredge seabed debris before the runway can reopen. Aviation analysts say the incident underscores the urgency of completing HKIA’s third-runway system—now slated for full commissioning in 2026—to provide operational resilience for the hub’s 70 million-passenger recovery target.

For corporate mobility managers the immediate task is traveller care: re-booking affected staff, allowing extra connection time, and monitoring air-cargo knock-on effects that could delay critical spare parts. Firms with tight project timelines should consider routing through alternative gateways such as Shenzhen Bao’an or Macau, both an hour away by cross-border coach.

Longer term, the episode will likely accelerate HKIA’s push toward advanced ground-movement radar and expanded runway-end safety areas, measures that airlines and global risk insurers have advocated for years.
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