China’s Comac expects mass production of C919 plane after 2021

epa05007034 Workers roll out the first C919 passenger jet plane at the state-owned Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China Ltd (COMAC) in Shanghai, China02 November 2015. China has spent seven years and huge amount to develop the 158-seat jet to boost its aviation industry, posing a challenge to Airbus and Boeing.  EPA/STRINGER CHINA OUT

Bloomberg

The state-owned Chinese company producing the nation’s first homebuilt single-aisle commercial aircraft expects to start mass production of the plane after 2021 as it seeks to chase markets in Asia and Africa.
The C919 jet, built by Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China Ltd., will take about three to four years to get certification for airworthiness from the Civil Aviation Administration of China, Lu Zheng, deputy general manager of sales at the company known as Comac, said in an interview at the Singapore Airshow on Tuesday.
The C919 is part of President
Xi Jinping’s “Made in China 2025” programme, which has identified aerospace among sectors that could accelerate China’s advancement. China’s ambition is to challenge the duopoly of Boeing Co. and Airbus SE in commercial aviation a few years down the line with its own range of aircraft. The Asian country has also teamed up with Russia to build a widebody jet.
“We’re working hard to change from a follower to challenger and we are striving to become a leader in the industry someday,” Lu said. “It will be a long journey for us.”
A certification by the CAAC will still only allow the plane within China. The planemaker needs to get all approvals from the US Federal Aviation Administration and the European Aviation Safety Agency to enable it to sell the aircraft in developed markets.
“We want to get certification from CAAC as soon as possible,” Lu said. “Once we get certification from FAA or EASA, it will help us greatly in making a push.”
The C919 made its maiden test flight in May 2017 and the full flight test program will develop over the next two years, Steven Lien, Asia president of Honeywell International Inc.’s aerospace unit, said earlier at the same event.
The US firm is one of the contractors involved in the project.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend