Bloomberg
China’s first airliner designed to compete with Airbus and Boeing is off to a slow start. After the fanfare surrounding the C919’s maiden flight in May, the single-aisle plane didn’t fly again for four months and the two test aircraft have only made about two dozen flights since, well below the normal schedule for a new commercial jet.
The dearth of flight time is a setback for a flagship project in President Xi Jinping’s plan to build a globally competitive aerospace industry and reduce China’s dependence on foreign aircraft makers.
“It just doesn’t bode well,†said Chad J. R. Ohlandt, a senior engineer with Santa Monica-based think tank RAND Corp. “What should happen is the first two or three prototypes roll off the line and go through a series of tests — at least a few dozen.â€
State-owned Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China Ltd., or Comac, the manufacturer of the plane, would ground the first test aircraft for about two months to undergo modifications, deputy director of the C919 programme Wu Yue told Shanghai’s Dragon TV.
Part of the problem is that Comac’s home base is Shanghai Pudong International Airport, one of the busiest airports in the country. The company decided to transfer its first test aircraft in November to Yanliang in Xi’an, a city in western China. That should make for a better base to conduct tests, said Jin Wei, an aviation researcher at the China Center for Information Industry Development, a state-backed think tank in Beijing.
“Having a successful maiden flight doesn’t mean it will be a smooth ride all the way,†Jin said. “They still need to make technical preparations and tweaks and this takes time.†Comac pointed out that Airbus SE and Boeing Co., which both have dedicated testing airfields, have more experience in commissioning a new jet, while this is the Chinese manufacturer’s first narrowbody airliner. The company said the frequency of test flights has increased since the move to Xi’an.
“After the maiden flight in May, the aircraft has been undergoing a lot of checks and adjustments, not only for future test flights but for getting ready to move to another airport,†a Comac spokesman said. “The testing for the C919 is progressing according to plan.†Normally, a company developing a new aircraft would follow the initial flight with many more tests, said George Ferguson, a Bloomberg Intelligence analyst. “Usually it doesn’t stutter-start.â€
China is trying to break into a $1.1 trillion market that has been virtually owned by the duopoly of Chicago-based Boeing and Toulouse, France-based Airbus, since the formation of the European aerospace group more than four decades ago. The C919, which relies heavily on equipment and systems from North American and European suppliers, would compete in the lucrative medium-range market dominated by the ubiquitous Airbus’s A320 and Boeing’s 737.
Without international certification, the C919 plane couldn’t fly to Singapore for Asia’s biggest air show this week, where Comac and hundreds of other manufacturers and suppliers rub shoulders with Boeing and Airbus. Comac has announced 785 orders for the C919, almost all from Chinese airlines.
Comac also has an order for the jet from GE Capital Aviation Services, an aircraft and engine leasing company. GE is one of C919’s contractors, supplying onboard maintenance and flight-data recording systems through a joint venture with Aviation Industry Corp. of China. The plane’s engines come from CFM International, GE’s joint venture with Safran Aircraft Engines. Other suppliers include Honeywell International Inc. and United Technologies Corp.
Comac is also trying to win customers for its smaller ARJ21 regional jet, which began commercial operation in 2016. So far, Comac has delivered just four of the planes, all to Chengdu Airlines, based in Sichuan. Comac is a major shareholder in Chengdu Airlines.
Comac “hasn’t delivered an aircraft to a customer they don’t own,†said RAND Corp.’s Ohlandt, who studies aerospace industrial policy in China and other countries. “The regional jet isn’t going anywhere.â€