China has decided to channel massive funds into creating a
commercial aircraft company to develop the country's own regional
jets, the demand for which is expected to rocket in the years
ahead, leading industry executives said Sunday in Beijing.
Approved by the State Council, China Aviation Industry Corporation
I (AVIC I) has launched AVIC I Commercial Aircraft Ltd at its
manufacturing base in Xi'an, the capital of Northwest China's
Shaanxi Province, to build and sell its ARJ21 airliner, said
Assistant President Tang Xiaoping.
With an initial funding of 5 billion yuan (US$602 million), the
ARJ21, set to fly at the end of 2006, is China's first aircraft
designed to meet its market needs and natural conditions, Tang said
in an interview with China Daily.
ARJ21, which stands for "advanced regional jet for the 21st
century," carries the new company's ambition to become a leading
supplier for domestic regional carriers, Tang said.
The move indicates China is advancing into the world's fledgling
regional jet market, since the national and international airliner
markets are largely monopolized by aircraft manufacturing giants
like Boeing and Airbus, analysts said.
The regional jets also target markets in other parts of Asia,
Africa and South America, Tang said.
In
China, 60 percent of flight routes range between 600 kilometres and
2,200 kilometres, and on average, 80 percent of daily flights are
with fewer than 100 passengers, according to Tang.
By
building for the shorter flight range and developing advanced
regional jets with 60 to 90 seats, AVIC I expects to increase
flight frequency for airline operators, reduce operational costs,
and lessen the impact of lean seasons on profits, he said.
With five seats in each row, the regional jet is very comfortable
for flyers, Tang said.
Moreover, the aircraft's feasibility study has considered the ways
to address the complicated natural conditions - mountain ranges and
relatively short runways in China's vast western regions, which
will make the ARJ21 especially suitable for destinations in the
country's west, he said.
Wang Qiming, director of AVIC I's civil aircraft department, said
the developers of the ARJ21 welcome foreign capital and
expertise.
Already, AVIC I has invited tenders for developing engines and some
electronic systems for the airliners, he said.
Sources at GE Aircraft Engines, the world's largest supplier of jet
engines for commercial regional jets, said the company is
discussing with AVIC I the potential use of its CF34 engine to
power the ARJ21.
Facing the fiery market competition from foreign manufacturers,
Tang said he believe AVIC I's keen understanding of the Chinese
market and conditions, plus its service, will help ARJ21 take a
slice of the lucrative global regional jet cake.
"Domestically, we expect to sell at least 300 ARJ21 aircraft within
20 years," he said.
(China Daily September 30, 2002)
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