Global Times

China rises in aviation supply chain

Airbus JV reaches milestone in manufactur­ing of aircraft parts

- By Tu Lei in Harbin

A joint venture ( JV) between Airbus and its Chinese partners reached a milestone on Tuesday as it delivered the 1,000th rudder to be used on Airbus A320 aircraft, a developmen­t that is being hailed as key step in the Chinese aviation industry’s globalizat­ion.

Since being establishe­d in 2009, the JV – Harbin Hafei Airbus Composite Manufactur­ing Centre ( HMC) in Harbin, Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province – has become the sole global supplier of rudders for the A320 family of aircraft.

After completion, the rudders are usually shipped to Stade, Germany, where they are fixed to the A320 fam

ily vertical stabilizer­s. The stabilizer­s are then delivered to assembly lines around the world.

In a ceremony marking the achievemen­t on Tuesday in Harbin, officials from both Airbus and its Chinese partners, including Harbin Aircraft Industry Group Corp and Hafei Aviation Industry Co, hailed the partnershi­p and vowed to expand their cooperatio­n.

“The deliveries have played a solid foundation for the cooperatio­n,” Cao Shengli, general manager of AVIC Harbin Aircraft Industry Group Co, said at the ceremony. Cao said that HMC could be a model in supporting the “China Made 2025” strategy and “Belt and Road” initiative.

“The delivery is a milestone for the manufactur­ing center and for our long- term partnershi­p with the Chinese aviation industry,” Airbus Commercial Aircraft China Chief

Operating Officer Francois Mery said at the ceremony.

Airbus holds 29 percent of the JV, which aims to manufactur­e composite materials, parts and components for the A350 XWB program and A320 family aircraft, as part of Airbus’ target of making 5 percent of the A350 XWB airframe in China.

Monthly production capacity for the A320 rudder is 48 units. Capacity is six units for the A350XWB per month, the company said.

Experts said that the partnershi­p has proven the progress China’s aviation industry has made over the years.

“The delivery of the 1,000th rudder shows that China has achieved an increasing­ly important position in the global aviation industry’s outsourcin­g, and there are more Chinese elements in the planes after years of developmen­t,” Lin Zhijie, an independen­t market watcher, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Cooperatio­n between Airbus and its Chinese suppliers began in 1985.

In the Airbus 320, Chinese suppliers can produce components in-

cluding wing leading edges, wing intermedia­te ribs, cargo door frames and rear passenger doors. In the Airbus 350XWB, components including belly- fairing panels, rudders and elevators can be designed and manufactur­ed in China as well.

Airbus said that the total value of its industrial cooperatio­n with the Chinese aviation industry reached $ 140 million in 2009 and jumped to about $ 500 million in 2015.

Airbus is not alone.

Boeing Co said that its activity in China contribute­s $ 800 million to $ 1 billion annually in direct support of China’s economy, including procuremen­t from the extensive supply base, joint venture revenues, operations, training, and research and developmen­t investment.

Boeing has worked with more than 35 major Chinese companies as direct contractor­s in production and also with hundreds of Chinese subcontrac­tors.

China builds horizontal stabilizer­s, vertical fins, the aft tail section, doors, wing panels, wire harnesses and other parts on the Next- Generation 737.

China also produces the rudder for the 737 MAX, a more fuel- efficient version of the best- selling 737 Classic. China contribute­s trailing edge wing ribs, horizontal stabilizer­s, vertical fins, ailerons, spoilers and inboard flaps for the 747- 8.

In addition, China has an important role on the 787 building the rudder, wing- to- body fairing panels, leading edges and panels for the vertical fin, and other composite parts.

However, Lin said that the Chinese aviation industry should not just be limited to the role of a supplier in global aviation manufactur­ing.

The main reason that manufactur­ers outsource components is not merely technologi­cal ability, it is mainly due to cost savings, according to Lin.

It is important for the suppliers to get involved in the production chains, but it is more important to have the ability to independen­tly develop the key parts such as engines. It is positive for domestic aircraft such as the C919, and it is also good for the improvemen­t of the country’s aviation industry, Lin added.

“The delivery of the 1,000th rudder shows that China has achieved an increasing­ly important position in the global aviation industry’s outsourcin­g, and there are more Chinese elements in the planes after years of developmen­t,” Lin Zhijie, an independen­t market watcher

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 ?? Photo: Tu Lei/ GT ?? An employee works on the A320 rudder assembly line of the Harbin Hafei Airbus Composite Manufactur­ing Centre in Harbin, Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province on Tuesday.
Photo: Tu Lei/ GT An employee works on the A320 rudder assembly line of the Harbin Hafei Airbus Composite Manufactur­ing Centre in Harbin, Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province on Tuesday.
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