Four U.S. airlines this week are intensifying a contest to open the next 
non-stop route to China, the world's hottest growth market. 
On Monday, 
American, Continental, Northwest and United airlines will submit briefs to the 
US Department of Transportation to boost their bids for the one China route to 
be approved this year. 
The DOT decision is expected to give an economic boost to one of the four US 
metro areas that would be linked to China by the new air service: Dallas-Fort 
Worth, Detroit, Washington, DC, or New York City. Of the four, only the New York 
area now has a non-stop link to China. 
The DOT is charged with choosing a route that will best serve the public 
interest. But that hasn't stopped the airlines from waging intense public 
lobbying campaigns to try to influence the decision. 
Even American Airlines lobbyist Will Ris calls the combined noise level "a 
little bit out of proportion." 
American and United Airlines have launched special websites that let the 
public sign petitions to the DOT. 
All of them have mobilized big-name supporters. United has signed up eight 
former US trade representatives and former Federal Aviation Administration chief 
Jane Garvey to push service between Washington and Beijing. 
American on Monday will announce it has dozens of members of Congress on its 
side. Northwest is also in the fray. 
Houston-based Continental, which wants to fly from its hub at Newark Liberty 
Airport to Shanghai, held a news conference this month in New York's Chinatown 
to build support. 
Continental argues New York and Shanghai are the most populous cities in the 
two nations not linked by non-stop service. Continental's proposed flights would 
"conveniently link the two largest business centers," says spokeswoman Julie 
King. 
Continental won't be able to make that argument for long. Shanghai-based 
China Eastern Airlines announced last week it plans Shanghai-New York non-stops 
starting December 8. 
The Chinese mainland, the USA's top Asian trading partner, is seeing 
double-digit annual growth rates in passenger counts, and air cargo shipments 
are growing nearly as fast. 
In 2008, China will host the Summer Olympics in Beijing. The Chinese 
government projects air traffic volume there will double by 2010. 
"China's aviation system is expanding faster than anyone else's," says Henry 
Steingass, the US Trade and Development Agency's top Asia officer. 
Because China restricts flights from abroad, four US carriers today fly 
non-stop to China from just three cities: New York, Chicago and San Francisco. 
American argues that its proposed Dallas/Fort Worth service would open the 
first gateway to China from the US South. United argues that Washington should 
be linked to Beijing to bring the two nations' capitals closer together. 
Special courtesy of USA Today