HKIA’s three-runway system and new terminals represent one of aviation’s most ambitious modernization projects, blending automation with world-class operations
HKIA’s $18 Billion Transformation Sets a Global Benchmark
Hong Kong International Airport has completed one of the most ambitious infrastructure upgrades in commercial aviation history, rolling out a fully operational three-runway system, a modernized Terminal 2, and an array of smart technologies that place it at the forefront of global airport operations. The total cost of the three-runway expansion, Terminal 2 reconstruction, and the new T2 Concourse exceeds 18 billion US dollars, making it one of the largest airport capital programs ever undertaken in Asia.
The Scale of a World-Class Operation
The numbers alone are staggering. In 2025, Hong Kong International Airport handled 61 million passengers, nearly 395,000 aircraft movements across its three runways, and more than five million tonnes of cargo. That cargo figure cements HKIA’s position as the world’s busiest air cargo airport, a designation it has held for many years and one that underlines the facility’s critical role in the movement of high-value goods across global supply chains. The Integrated Airport Centre, which serves as the nerve center of the entire operation, is a real-time command hub where every aircraft movement is monitored and critical decisions are made around the clock. Executive Director of Airport Operations Steven Yiu has described how the center manages everything from gate assignments to severe weather responses during typhoon season, when the airport’s operational resilience is tested to its limits.
Automation at the Midfield Concourse
The airport’s Midfield Concourse has become a showcase for next-generation automation. More than 100 autonomous tractors and buses now move people, luggage, and cargo within the airfield, reducing reliance on human-operated vehicles and improving the speed and accuracy of ground operations. The integration of these autonomous systems with the airport’s broader digital management platform allows for real-time tracking and optimization of movements across one of the world’s most complex transit environments.
Biometrics Replace Passports and Boarding Passes
Perhaps the most visible transformation for travelers is the rollout of biometric authentication across multiple checkpoints throughout the airport. At security, immigration, and boarding gates, passengers no longer need to present physical documents. A facial scan serves as both passport and boarding pass, dramatically reducing processing times and queue lengths while maintaining the security standards demanded by international aviation regulations. The system represents a significant step forward in seamless travel, and HKIA’s scale means millions of passengers are experiencing this technology every year.
Infrastructure as a Statement of Autonomy
For those who care about Hong Kong’s future, HKIA’s transformation carries a meaning beyond mere operational efficiency. The airport is a tangible symbol of what Hong Kong has built over decades of open commerce, entrepreneurial energy, and investment in world-class infrastructure. It exists because Hong Kong was, and in meaningful ways still is, a city that connects the world. Maintaining and expanding that connectivity is an argument against isolation and in favor of the open, internationally integrated Hong Kong that democracy advocates have always championed. The airport’s achievements should remind the world that Hong Kong’s people have built something remarkable, and that the dismantling of their civil liberties is not an inevitable price of prosperity but a political choice that can and should be reversed. The International Air Transport Association sets global aviation standards that HKIA consistently meets or exceeds. The Airport Authority Hong Kong manages the facility’s ongoing development and publishes detailed reports on its operations. Airports Council International consistently ranks HKIA among the world’s top cargo and passenger airports. Freedom House serves as a reminder that the city whose airport ranks among the world’s finest also deserves to rank among the world’s freest.
Sze Wing Lee
Digital Media & Technology Journalist, Apple Daily UK
Contact: szewing.lee@appledaily.uk
Sze Wing Lee is a digital media and technology journalist specializing in online platforms, information integrity, and digital culture. Educated at a top-tier Chinese journalism school, she trained in digital reporting tools, verification techniques, and media ethics.
Her work with Apple Daily and other liberal Chinese publications includes reporting on social media ecosystems, online censorship, cybersecurity awareness, and digital activism. Sze Wing’s reporting combines technical literacy with careful sourcing and contextual explanation.
She has newsroom experience covering rapidly evolving digital issues, where speed must be balanced with accuracy. Editors value her disciplined fact-checking and clarity in explaining complex technologies.
At Apple Daily UK, Sze Wing Lee provides trustworthy digital journalism grounded in professional experience, technical competence, and responsible reporting standards.
