Monday, May 18, 2009

First Made-In-China Airbus Makes Maiden Flight / First A320 Assembled In China Passes Maiden Flight

First Made-In-China Airbus Makes Maiden Flight / First A320 Assembled In China Passes Maiden Flight
(NSI News Source Info) BEIJING - May 18, 2009: The first Airbus plane built outside Europe made a successful four-hour maiden flight on Monday in China, European consortium EADS (EAD.PA) said. Airbus began assembling some A320 jets in Tianjin near Beijing in September from fuselage parts shipped from Europe, increasing its presence in the world's fastest growing markets for large aircraft. An Airbus A320 is assembled at the workshop in north China's Tianjin municipality, on Dec. 23, 2008, with three other Airbus A320 also in the process of assembling at the same time. "This A320 assembled in China unquestionably demonstrated the same quality and performance as those assembled and delivered in Hamburg or Toulouse," Fernando Alonso, senior vice president at Airbus, said in a statement. Airbus aims to reach output of four A320s a month in China by the end of 2011. Airbus has estimated that China would need more than 3,000 large aircraft between 2006 and 2025, including 180 super jumbo passenger planes. The first aircraft will be delivered to Dragon Aviation Leasing in June and be operated by China's Sichuan Airlines. Chinese firms have ordered more than 700 aircraft from Airbus, the majority of which are from the A320 family of planes, it said. Airbus and U.S. rival Boeing (BA.N) have been turning to Asian markets, led by China, for growth as demand weakens at home. The jet is to be delivered to Dragon Aviation Leasing in June for operation by Sichuan Airlines, a regional carrier based in central China's Sichuan province. Airbus holds a 51 percent stake in FALC, a joint venture between Airbus and a consortium that includes China Aviation Industry Corp., the country's biggest aircraft maker, and the Tianjin Free Trade Zone. But Airbus faces criticism from European unions who say the move adds to outsourcing fears amid the recession and could result in the loss of European technology to a potential jet-making rival. Beijing may need an estimated $30 billion to realise an ambitious goal to manufacture passenger jets with more than 150 seats and freighters capable of handling more than 100 tonnes of cargo to take on Boeing and Airbus by 2014. ($=6.83 yuan) (Reporting by Kirby Chien; Editing by Nick Macfie)

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