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Associated Press
A model of the Chinese-made C919 airliner was displayed recently at the China Aviation Expo.

China sets sights on building jumbo jets

– Along with plans to put a man on the moon and develop its own aircraft carrier, China’s sky-high ambition now includes building its own made-in-China jumbo jet, to one day compete with Boeing and Airbus for a share of the lucrative commercial aviation marketplace.

The project, still in the early development stages, calls for the first Chinese jumbo jet, dubbed the C919, to make its maiden flight in 2014, with the first commercial delivery two years after that. The jet is being produced by the Shanghai-based Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, which is manufacturing smaller regional jets due to hit the market next year.

China’s reasons for wanting to enter the large jet market are clear; Chinese airlines are set to buy more than 2,000 big jets by 2025, making it one of the world’s largest markets. Asia’s airlines in total are expected to place orders for about 10,000 jets in that same period.

But China’s move into the large jet business represents a bold leap – some say too bold – with any chance of a payoff many years off. The technology is rapidly evolving, Boeing and Airbus have long-established track records and safety-minded consumers may be wary to switch to a jet made in China.

“I tend to be a little bit skeptical that this can happen a decade or decades away,” said Nicholas Lardy, a China expert with the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Still, Chinese officials think that they have found a niche to compete with aviation’s two big players. The C919 will be a single-aisle jet with 150 to 190 seats, while the other plane makers are concentrating on wide-body jumbo jets. Their jet will be cheaper, they say, and also more environmentally friendly.

Chinese officials said they hope developing a commercial aircraft industry will spur other areas of the economy.

But beyond sheer economics, there is also the matter of prestige. China’s Communist Party leaders have long favored grandiose projects.