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China’s home-grown planes touch down in Southeast Asia as West mulls approval

  • US$2 billion agreement expands footprint of domestic models as certification winds its way through US, Europe
  • Appropriations facilitated by state entities account for major portion of purchase ledgers

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China’s home-grown passenger jetliner - the ARJ21 - is delivered to Indonesian airline TransNusa on Dec 18, 2022, in the first sale of a Chinese-made regional jet to a foreign market. Photo: Xinhua

As it waits for the long process of certification to work its way out in wealthier markets, China has turned to a new client base – Southeast Asia – for its home-made passenger planes.

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At the recently concluded China-Asean expo in Nanning, capital of the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, the state-owned Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China (Comac) signed a US$2 billion deal with Brunei’s Gallop Air to supply it with 30 aircraft.

The deal was announced on Monday by Tianju Group, a Shaanxi-based private enterprise with an ownership stake in the Brunei airline, but no details about delivery time or aircraft type were provided.

Comac did not reply to a request from the South China Morning Post for comment on the state of its orders.

At the signing ceremony, the backdrop mentioned the ARJ21 – a mid-range Comac airliner that began development in 2002 – but an online statement also brought up the single-aisle C919, which could potentially compete with Boeing’s 737 and Airbus’ A320.
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