Bangkok Post

C919 enters passenger service

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SHANGHAI: China Eastern Airlines Corp Ltd entered China’s home-grown narrow-body C919 jet into passenger service yesterday and completed its first commercial flight, marking a milestone in the country’s effort to become more self-reliant.

The C919 is the product of statebacke­d Commercial Aviation Corp of China (Comac) which began developing the jet 15 years ago to rival Airbus SE’s A320neo and Boeing Co’s 737 Max single-aisle jet families.

President Xi Jinping has hailed the project as a triumph of Chinese innovation, while yesterday state media trumpeted the plane as a symbol of industrial prowess and national pride.

“After generation­s of endeavour, we finally broke the West’s aviation monopoly and rid ourselves of the humiliatio­n of ‘800 million shirts for one Boeing’,” Beijing Daily wrote, referring to the early years of economic reform about 40 years ago when China manufactur­ed mainly low-value goods.

The C919 took off at 10.32am local time from Shanghai Hongqiao Internatio­nal Airport where Comac and China Eastern Airlines are headquarte­red, and landed two hours later at Beijing Capital Airport, showed flight tracker app Variflight.

“I’m confident about the plane. The flight was smoother than expected,” one of about 130 passengers told CCTV as he disembarke­d.

The plane was scheduled to return to Shanghai yesterday, then make a longer two-way flight to the southweste­rn city of Chengdu today.

Lv Boyuan, a 21-year-old student and aviation enthusiast, was at Shanghai’s airport yesterday to fly to Chengdu from where he planned to return on the C919 the following day.

“I’ve been really looking forward to its flight, especially because it’s a newgenerat­ion aircraft, unlike Boeing and Airbus equivalent­s which have been around for a number of years now,” said Mr Lv.

The C919 made its first flight in 2017 after years of delays and has undergone numerous test flights since.

State-backed China Eastern Airlines ordered five of the jets in March 2021. It took delivery of the first in December and has said it expects to receive the remainder this year.

In total, Comac had won 1,035 orders from 32 customers as of last year. A company official has since told media the figure exceeds 1,200.

The planemaker expects annual production to reach 150 C919 jets within five years, domestic media reported in January.

Though assembled in China, the C919 relies heavily on Western components, including engines and avionics, from firms including General Electric Co, Safran SA and Honeywell Internatio­nal Inc.

Li Hanming, an independen­t expert on Chinese aviation, said most C919 orders were letters of intent from domestic customers. Its few foreign customers include lessor GE Capital Aviation Services Ltd. “For the C919, the domestic market is big enough,” Mr Li said.

The internatio­nal market is questionab­le given that neither European nor US regulators have certificat­ed the aircraft, said Greg Waldron, Asia managing editor of industry publicatio­n FlightGlob­al. “Until this happens, key internatio­nal markets will be closed to the C919,” he said.

The C919’s predecesso­r, the ARJ21, is a short-haul 90-seat aircraft that entered commercial operation in 2016 and is flown by major Chinese airlines as well as Indonesia’s TransNusa.

The ARJ21’s use in Indonesia indicates the C919’s internatio­nal future lies mainly in the developing world, Mr Waldron said.

 ?? AFP ?? China’s first domestical­ly produced passenger jet C919 sits on the tarmac before its first commercial flight from Shanghai to Beijing, in Shanghai Hongqiao Airport yesterday.
AFP China’s first domestical­ly produced passenger jet C919 sits on the tarmac before its first commercial flight from Shanghai to Beijing, in Shanghai Hongqiao Airport yesterday.

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