
4 more Hong Kong premium taxi fleets hit the streets after getting full licences
Advertisement
A Transport Department spokesman said it had granted full taxi fleet licences to four firms, allowing them to operate for five years.
'The four fleets officially commenced services [on Monday],' he said.
The four fleets are run by Big Boss Taxi Company, CMG Fleet Management, Sino Development (International) and Tai Wo Management.
Sino Development's Big Bee fleet is offering a mixed taxi service, while the other three will only operate urban cabs.
Advertisement
Earlier this month, SynCab received the same licence to offer premium taxi services in the city.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
6 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
WAIC Shanghai: China reveals new great leap forward with 1,509 AI models
China is now home to 1,509 AI models, which accounted for more than 40 per cent of the world's total, according to data from the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai , showing the country's great leap forward in the fast-growing technology. That number accounted for more than 40 per cent of the 3,755 total AI models known worldwide, according to a Xinhua report on Monday, citing WAIC data. 'We see AI enabling scalable and cost-efficient production of multimodal content across text, images, audio and video,' said UBS Securities analyst Wei Xiong, who pointed out that Chinese models were 'showing early success in AI video generation'. The number of AI models reflected the country's big strides in transforming into an AI powerhouse through various private and publicly backed open-source development initiatives, narrowing the gap with the US. The open-source approach gives public access to a programme's source code, allowing third-party software developers to modify or share its design, fix broken links or scale up its capabilities.


South China Morning Post
36 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific to step up hiring more pilots from mainland China
Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific Airways will recruit more pilots from mainland China to diversify its workforce after the first batch of 30 cadets from across the border finished training and started flying. Advertisement Chris Kempis, the airline's director of flight operations, said on Monday that 60 mainland cadets from a pool of more than 750 applicants had entered its pilot programme since its expansion in 2023. Among the first group of mainland recruits, 30 have already qualified as second officers after completing training in Australia. Other cadets are currently undergoing training in the United States. 'We are open to many more [cadets] in the future, and we look forward to that,' Kempis said, highlighting the cadet scheme's ongoing role as a key source of pilots. He said that the programme had trained more than 1,100 pilots since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. Advertisement Cathay currently employs 3,200 pilots, a 23 per cent jump from 2,600 in February, which is more than what it immediately needed, Kempis said. He said the group had more than 500 pilots with its budget carrier HK Express.


South China Morning Post
36 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific to step up hiring more pilots from mainland China
Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific Airways will recruit more pilots from mainland China to diversify its workforce after the first batch of 30 cadets from across the border finished training and started flying. Chris Kempis, the airline's director of flight operations, said on Monday that 60 mainland cadets from a pool of more than 750 applicants had entered its pilot programme since its expansion in 2023. Among the first group of mainland recruits, 30 have already qualified as second officers after completing training in Australia. Other cadets are currently undergoing training in the United States. 'We are open to many more [cadets] in the future, and we look forward to that,' Kempis said, highlighting the cadet scheme's ongoing role as a key source of pilots. He said that the programme had trained more than 1,100 pilots since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. Cathay currently employs 3,200 pilots, a 23 per cent jump from 2,600 in February, which is more than what it immediately needed, Kempis said. He said the group had more than 500 pilots with its budget carrier HK Express.