China Daily

Airbus bullish on Chinese demand for widebody aircraft

- By ZHU WENQIAN zhuwenqian@chinadaily.com.cn

European aircraft manufactur­er Airbus Group SE said it plans to offer training to pilots and engineers for its new A350 widebody plane at the Hua Ou Aviation Training Center in Beijing, a joint ventureof Air bus and China Aviation Supplies Holding Co.

The group said it is bullish on the country’s demand for widebody aircraft, fueled by fast-growing long-haul internatio­nal routes.

Airbus said it will also offer training about the structure of composite materials at Hua Ou Aviation Training Center to Chinese and Asian customers.

Since its establishm­ent in 1996, Hua Ou Aviation has trained a large number of pilots and aircraft maintenanc­e engineers, including crew for A320 and A330 aircraft.

Francois Mery, COO with Airbus Commercial Aircraft China, said the company has increasing­ly attached greater importance to its customer service work in the Chinese market.

“Hua Ou has been a solid base for our China-oriented customer service and it has been running successful­ly.

“We also aim to provide more customer service staff who speak Chinese, instead of offering services indirectly from Europe,” he said.

Meanwhile Bruno Bousquet, vice-president of customer service with Airbus Commercial Aircraft China, said Airbus has offered more end-to-end customer services to Chinese airlines.

He said for instance, it provides packaged cabin accommodat­ion services to help airlines to optimize their cabin setup and increase revenues.

Bousquet said in this case, airlines don’t need to seek different suppliers for fragmented modificati­on services, as such a process was complicate­d, especially for small and startup airlines.

Currently, the cabin of an A320 aircraft can hold a maximum 188 seats, six seats more than the original version and with no change to the spaces between rows.

Chinese budget airline Spring Airlines purchased Airbus’ packaged cabin accommodat­ion services and modified the cabins of 14 of its A320 aircraft.

“Particular­ly for single-aisle aircraft like the A320, most airlines hope to have more seats, without compromisi­ng comfort levels,” he said.

 ?? XIE MINGGANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An Airbus A350 plane prepares for takeoff at the Shuangliu Internatio­nal Airport in Chengdu, Sichuan province.
XIE MINGGANG / FOR CHINA DAILY An Airbus A350 plane prepares for takeoff at the Shuangliu Internatio­nal Airport in Chengdu, Sichuan province.

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