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Oct 28, 2025

Algiers–Guangzhou Non-Stop Service Takes Off, Building New Africa–China Air Bridge

Algiers–Guangzhou Non-Stop Service Takes Off, Building New Africa–China Air Bridge
Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport welcomed a milestone arrival in the early hours of 28 October when Air Algérie flight AH3180 from Algiers touched down, inaugurating the first ever non-stop passenger link between Algeria and southern China.

The twice-weekly Boeing A330 service marks Air Algérie’s entry into the Chinese mainland market and gives Chinese businesses a direct gateway to North Africa’s largest economy. For Algerian exporters of energy-sector equipment and agricultural produce, Guangzhou’s Pearl-River Delta manufacturing cluster offers rapid belly-cargo connections to the rest of East Asia, slashing transit times by up to 12 hours compared with previous routings via the Gulf.

Airport officials said the route is part of Baiyun’s winter-schedule push to ‘re-knit’ Guangzhou’s long-haul network. The airport has opened or restored more than 30 international services since October, luring carriers from Central Asia, Europe and now Africa with fee waivers and fast-track slot approvals. Freight forwarders expect northbound volumes of electronic components and household goods to balance southbound petrochemical and fresh-food traffic, making the route commercially sustainable.

For mobility managers, the new link removes a chronic travel bottleneck for engineering teams shuttling between Chinese EPC contractors and hydrocarbon projects around Hassi Messaoud. Visa-free transit via Guangzhou under China’s 24-hour policy further eases crew rotations. HR directors should review travel-risk insurance, however, as Algeria still requires advance entry visas for most Chinese passport holders.

Analysts say the flight also carries geopolitical weight: China overtook France as Algeria’s top trading partner in 2024 and is courting the country for Belt-and-Road port concessions on the Mediterranean. A direct air corridor adds soft-power heft and could spur similar launches to Cairo or Casablanca as African demand rebounds post-pandemic.
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