China’s C919 jet rises above tech war turbulence

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
7 Min Read

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The Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China (Comac) says that its C919 homegrown, narrow-body jetliner is on schedule to take to the skies this year, despite geopolitical headwinds that had threatened to keep the plane on the tarmac.

Six C919 prototypes are now shuttling between Shanghai and Xi’an for airfield and flight tests simulating emergencies and extreme conditions to assess its performance and safety, the state-run Comac said in a statement.

The Shanghai-based company recently said the plane is primed for its first commercial flight by the end of the year or in early 2022, depending on how quickly it receives airworthiness permits from relevant government regulators. 

The US-China tech war had threatened to ground the plane. The single-aisle jet relies on Western-made components including advanced engines furnished by America’s GE Aviation and its French partner CFM. Trump slapped an export ban on Comac late last year in the waning days of his tenure. It remains in place under the Biden administration. 

But Zhao Keliang, a deputy chief designer of the C919 project, said in recent local press interviews that many foreign companies continue to support the airliner project and that GE and its partners would still ship engines to Comac to fulfill their contractual obligations, as the related deals were signed before Trump’s imposed sanctions.

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