Boeing
to sell 300 jets to China firms, set up China plant:
Xinhua
Send a link to a friend
[September 23, 2015]
By Fang Yan and Matthew Miller
BEIJING (Reuters) - Boeing Co has signed
deals to sell 300 aircraft to three Chinese firms and set up an aircraft
plant in China, becoming the first U.S. firm to clinch a business tie-up
in the country since Chinese president Xi Jinping began a U.S. state
visit, the official Xinhua news agency said.
|
The aircraft deals, potentially worth tens of billions of dollars in
total, are collectively the largest order the aerospace firm has
received from Chinese companies.
China's ICBC Financial Leasing Co, a unit of the Industrial and
Commercial Bank of China, on Wednesday separately confirmed it will
buy 30 of Boeing's 737-800 jets, worth $2.88 billion at list prices.
China Aviation Supplies Holding Company and China Development Bank
Leasing are the other two customers for the aircraft, said Xinhua.
Boeing, which is locked in a fierce battle for plane orders with
European rival Airbus, will build its first aircraft completion
plant outside the United States in China in order to gain a foothold
in that important market, say industry observers.
Boeing raised its forecast for China's aircraft demand by 5 percent
in August, saying that the country will need 6,330 planes over the
next 20 years.
It signed a cooperation document with Commercial Aircraft
Corporation of China (Comac) to build the aircraft completion center
for its 737 passenger jet in China, added Xinhua. The agency didn't
disclose further details.
An aircraft's interiors and some systems are usually installed, and
the plane is painted in the customer's livery, at completion
centers. The final flight trials are then completed before the
aircraft is delivered to the customer.
Boeing executives and officials from the Chinese firms could not
immediately be reached for comment. Xi, who arrived in Seattle on
Tuesday, is set to visit Boeing on Wednesday.
[to top of second column] |
The number of air passengers traveling to, from and within China is
set to nearly triple by 2034 to some 1.3 billion, surpassing an
expected 1.2 billion for the United States, according to official
estimates.
State-owned airlines like Air China, China Eastern Airlines and
China Southern Airlines, and privately-owned budget carrier Spring
Airlines, are growing fast and adding new planes to meet this demand
for both short and long haul air travel.
Boeing's plans for an aircraft completion center comes after Airbus
signed an agreement in July to set up its second Chinese plant.
(Additional reporting by Siva Govindasamy in SINGAPORE; Editing by
Kenneth Maxwell and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|