China Daily (Hong Kong)

Boeing unveils completion center

- By ZHU WENQIAN zhuwenqian@ chinadaily.com.cn

Boeing Co and the Commercial Aircraft Corp of China on Tuesday signed an agreement and unveiled Boeing’s first overseas completion and delivery center.

The joint venture is located in Zhoushan, East China’s Zhejiang province, with registered capital of $55 million. Boeing has invested $33 million and takes a 60 percent share, while COMAC invested $22 million and has a 40 percent holding.

Constructi­on of the center, which will consist of a completion center under a joint venture between Boeing and COMAC, and a delivery center owned by Boeing, got underway in early May. It will be capable of tasks including cabin installati­on, painting, flight testing and aircraft maintenanc­e.

COMAC said it will jointly participat­e in the completion tasks together with Boeing employees, but the proportion of workers the two sides would assign remains unknown.

The manufactur­er of the C919 large passenger jet said the project will help to broaden internatio­nal cooperatio­n between China and internatio­nal players, and optimize the environmen­t for the growth of the civil aircraft industry in China.

He Dongfeng, president of COMAC, said: “Zhoushan and Seattle are located at the two sides of the Pacific Ocean. In the past, most people living in Seattle didn’t know about Zhoushan, but now they come to work here. Our completion center has linked us together.”

Boeing expects that the plant will finish first-stage constructi­on and go into operation next May. By the end of 2018, Boeing will deliver the first single-aisle B737 MAX plane directly from Zhoushan to a domestic airline.

With a maximum annual delivery capacity of 100 planes at its center in Zhoushan, Boeing plans to deliver all the aircraft completed in Zhoushan to Chinese customers, as it strives to meet the strong demand for single-aisle aircraft in China.

Lin Zhijie, an aviation industry analyst and columnist at Carnoc.com, a leading civil aviation website portal in China, said: “One-fifth of narrow-body aircraft in the world are delivered to China. It is a huge market Boeing hopes to seize.”

planes

He said the Airbus final assembly line in Tianjin, which became operationa­l in 2008, has helped Airbus, the archrival of Boeing, boost its market share in China from 34 percent to 47 percent over the past decade.

“Boeing is now making more efforts by establishi­ng its first overseas completion and delivery center in Zhoushan, in order to seize the strong market potential in China and strengthen its cooperatio­n with Chinese aviation industry players,” Lin added.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? An employee works on a Boeing Co 737 MAX airplane on the production line at the company's manufactur­ing facility in Renton, Washington, the United States.
BLOOMBERG An employee works on a Boeing Co 737 MAX airplane on the production line at the company's manufactur­ing facility in Renton, Washington, the United States.

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