Khaleej Times

Mitsubishi Heavy to postpone regional jet delivery by 2 years

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tokyo — Mitsubishi Heavy Industries said on Monday it would postpone delivery of its longawaite­d regional jet by two years, and warned over soaring developmen­t costs for the problempla­gued plane.

This is the fifth time that the company has pushed back the commercial rollout of its Mitsubishi Regional Jet (MRJ), Japan’s first domestical­ly produced passenger plane for over half a century.

The decision to move back the first customer delivery to mid2020 from mid-2018 comes after local media reports said the plane needed more design changes to ensure it was safe.

The problem was linked to the location of certain electronic equipment, the Nikkei business daily and other Japanese media reported. The company said it was modifying the design of “electrical configurat­ions” to meet the latest safety standards, which have become more and more strict given the threat of terrorism.

“We now have to think of risks that are unthinkabl­e in the normal course of things, such as a massive flood of water damaging electrical systems or a bomb explosion de- stroying those systems,” Nobuo Kishi, vice president of the firm’s aviation unit, told a press briefing in Tokyo.

Developmen­t costs could come in as much as 40 per cent higher than an original range of between ¥150-180 billion ($1.3-1.6 billion), the firm said, citing stricter safety standards. The developmen­t of the MRJ has suffered a series of delays, largely owing to software upgrades and other design changes. The original plan when the programme started in 2008 was for the first customer delivery to begin in 2013.

The twin-engine MRJ marks a new chapter in the country’s aviation sector, which last built a commercial airliner in 1962 — the YS11 turboprop that was discontinu­ed about a decade later. After initially being barred from developing aircraft following World War II, Japan — and its MRJ jet — is competing with other passenger jet manufactur­ers such as Brazil’s Embraer and Canada’s Bombardier.

Mitsubishi unveiled the jet — which is about 35 metres (115 feet) long and seats about 80 passengers — in October 2014 and has received more than 400 orders.

The short-to-medium-haul plane was backed by the Japanese government and a consortium of major firms including Toyota.

Last year, the new passenger jet completed a flight to the United States for testing, after aborting two earlier attempts.

The company’s Tokyo-listed shares slipped 1.59 per cent to close at ¥524.1 ($4.60). — AFP

 ??  ?? Shunichi Miyanaga, president and CEO of Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, speaks during a Press conference at the company’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo on Monday. — AFP
Shunichi Miyanaga, president and CEO of Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, speaks during a Press conference at the company’s headquarte­rs in Tokyo on Monday. — AFP

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