PEK to Create New Airport . Will the Riots Stop?
	
	
		Beijing plans to build a new USD$14 billion  airport to the south of the Chinese capital as congestion continues to  clog runways and gates at PEK.
  The new facility, which will border on Hebei province, is planned to  handle 72 million passengers and 2 million tons of cargo annually,  according to a document posted on the website of the Ministry of  Environmental Protection late last week.
  Beijing's Capital Airport, which was built in 1958, is already  operating beyond its designed capacity of 80 million passengers per  year. In 2013, the airport handled 83 million visitors.
  China's airports in total handled more than 754 million passengers  last year, up 11 percent from 2012 and 86 percent from five years ago.
  Congestion and delays are only set to worsen as manufacturers  estimate one new aircraft will take to China's skies every other day for  the next two decades.
  By 2015, Beijing alone is expected to see 113 million air passengers  each year, rising to 142 million by 2020, according to the document.
A shortage of slots at major airports in Beijing, Shanghai and  Guangzhou, along with China's restricted air corridors, cause constant  delays at Chinese airports which sometimes lead to riots.
In February, angry passengers protesting a long delay smashed  computers and chairs at Xinzheng airport. One passenger even managed to  get into the airport's control room and beat up airport staff, according  to a local media report.