COMAC jets for Vietnam show China's push for international market


By Phuong Nguyen, Francesco Guarascio and Lisa Barrington

HANOI (Reuters) – China’s drive to break into foreign aviation markets with its homegrown COMAC jets has intensified, with a push to persuade Vietnam to authorise its planes in the country, according to two people with knowledge of the talks and documents.

COMAC’s actions in Vietnam demonstrate how the state-owned firm has in the past year embarked on a more deliberate marketing approach to regulators and airlines as it seeks to compete internationally with leading Western planemakers Airbus and Boeing.

After months of talks, Vietnam’s top private airline VietJet was supposed to start on Jan. 15 the short-term lease for a domestic route of two C909 regional jets operated by crew from China’s Chengdu Airlines, according to documents seen by Reuters that provide insight into its strategy.

But Vietnam’s aviation regulator has yet to authorise the deal, cautious about greenlighting a plane currently certified only by China and Indonesia, the two people and a third person said.

The lease had been reported by Vietnamese media, however the approval delay, VietJet’s longer-term strategy for COMAC jets and the planemaker’s efforts to win regulatory approval, including offering favourable financial terms and training, have not been previously reported.

The up to 90-seat C909, until November known as the ARJ21, was China’s first jet engine-powered plane to reach commercial production and entered service in 2016, with around 160 delivered so far.

The regional jet is not as high-profile as COMAC’s more advanced narrowbody C919 plane, but it would allow the planemaker to gain a foothold in one of the world’s fastest-growing aviation markets and boost its visibility outside China ahead of a C919 production ramp-up.

It would also send a message to rivals.

VietJet had been talking to a foreign lessor for months to rent two E190 regional jets built by Brazil’s Embraer, the top global maker of 90-seat jets, separate sources familiar with the discussions said, with one adding pilots had been in the process of being hired for those planes.

But the talks collapsed late last year, Vietnamese media reported. VietJet intended to use either the Embraer or COMAC planes to connect Vietnam’s main cities to the tourist archipelago of Con Dao, where larger jets cannot land.

The two people with knowledge of VietJet’s talks with COMAC said the Chinese offer was under very attractive financial terms that one of the people said were “too good to resist.”



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