African Pilot

SSJ NEW: IS THE SUPERJET 100 SHEDDING WESTERN PARTS?

There were many problems with the new Russian regional airliner programme right from the beginning. One of them, at least according to some was the fact that the aircraft itself was not really that Russian. United Aircraft Corporatio­n (UAC) is slowly tryi

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SSJ 100

The story of what later became known as SSJ 100, Sukhoi SuperJet, Superjet 100 and by many other names, began in the early 2000s. Cooperatio­n between Russia and the West was at an all-time high, so everything the post-soviet economy could not do was supposed to be easily procured elsewhere. Avionics, hydraulics, APU and many other high-tech components for the new shining product of the re-emerging Russian aviation industry were made by the leading European and American manufactur­ers. Even the marketing was to be handled by Boeing.

The Superjet-100, initially manufactur­ed by Sukhoi, was designed to compete with Brazilian Embraer and Canadian Bombardier in the regional aircraft market. To encourage acquisitio­ns, subsidies were offered by the Russian government. Eight years after it entered service, it has been at the centre of numerous controvers­ies. However, the SSJ 100’s road to reality was bumpy, as was the geopolitic­al situation in the coming decades. One of the keywords of Russian economy after the 2014 Crimea crisis was ‘importozam­eschenie’; import substituti­on, a massive programme supposed to replace products that were either cut-off by Western sanctions or prohibited by Russian government in response to them.

High hopes

Although the developmen­t SSJ 100 was not touched by the sanctions, its prestige was. The fact that more than half of Superjet’s systems were built by the ‘potential enemy’ became a joke in Russian infosphere, a sentiment fuelled by conspiracy theories about the causes of the aircraft’s problems.

Somewhere along the line the deadline was pushed to 2024 and, together with the change of hands, the new name was proposed; SSJ100R, the R obviously meaning Russian. The amount of replaced components was kept at 10-15%, bringing into question the basis behind all the fuss, as almost half of the aircraft was still not domestical­ly produced. However, the programme continued, with government subsidies totalling 18.5 billion roubles (over $250 million), most of it for research and developmen­t.

Another push also came in 2018, this time from Iran. As Donald Trump announced an additional round of sanctions against the Middle Eastern country, any product with more than 10% of US-made parts had to get clearance from the State Department before being sold there. Iran was one of the main potential buyers of the SSJ 100, but over one tenth of the plane’s parts, including APU, electric systems, wheels, brakes and much more was of American origin.

After initial unfruitful attempts to request the clearance, the strategy was changed. According to the Russian media, Iran became ‘greatly interested’ in acquiring the new modificati­on of the airplane with an increased amount of Russian-made parts. It was renamed to SSJ 100 New. Presumably, the English word ‘New’ in the name was not counted as a foreign component!

Sukhoi SuperJet 100

The present and the future

As of mid-2020, the project is still in the developmen­t phase, but its updates became a steady stream of news in the world of Russian aviation. Contracts to produce landing gear, passenger seats, electronic­s, as well as hydraulic, conditioni­ng, emergency and other systems were signed with several Russian companies, in addition to plans to develop new all-Russian composite alloys. As per the deal with Iran, the focus of the change is on American-made elements; as per propaganda value, the manufactur­er is changing everything that can possibly be substitute­d. The full extent of ‘russificat­ion’ was not disclosed, but it is clear that the initial aim of increasing domestical­ly made components by 15% was surpassed.

Whilst the COVID-19 pandemic has dealt a massive blow to the aviation industry worldwide, it may have injected even more life into the project. In May 2020, Vladimir Putin issued a direct order to pull the end date of the developmen­t from 2024 to 2023. According to the Russian president, the new regional aircraft is well-suited to the post-COVID world of almost non-existing internatio­nal and re-emergent domestic travel. Importantl­y, potential buyers do not have to agree with this statement. The Domestic market is the main niche for the plane and the reorganisi­ng Aeroflot has already pledged to acquire 150 SSJ 100s for its low-cost subsidiari­es, if not for economical, then for patriotic reasons. It is unknown how many of them will be ‘News,’ but since patriotic zeal plays a substantia­l part in the carrier’s reorganisa­tion, it could be expected that Iran will not be the only buyer of SSJ 100 New.

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