By Lisa Barrington
(Reuters) -Chinese language planemaker COMAC is falling behind on beforehand acknowledged supply targets for the manufacturing of its narrow-body C919 business aircraft, based on regulatory filings from the three airways that fly the mannequin.
China Japanese Airways, Air China and China Southern had been anticipating 32 of the planes to be delivered this yr, however as of September solely 5 have been handed over from COMAC, based on airline monetary experiences and information from ch-aviation and Flightradar24.
The state-owned producer has reduce its personal C919 manufacturing goal to 25 this yr from a beforehand acknowledged aim of 75, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday, citing sources accustomed to the matter. COMAC didn’t reply instantly to a request for remark.
COMAC in January stated it deliberate to ship 30 C919 planes and scale up annual manufacturing capability to 50 plane in 2025. In March, it raised the manufacturing goal as much as 75, based on Chinese language media experiences.
COMAC is searching for to compete internationally with main Western planemakers Airbus and Boeing, which produce dozens of their single-aisle A320neo household and 737 MAX jets every month.
COMAC this yr confronted the surprising problem of america quickly halting exports of the CFM engines it makes use of on the C919 between June and July as commerce tensions escalated. A key vulnerability of China’s jet-building programme is that main parts of the designs use overseas elements.
The C919, which lacks benchmark certifications from main Western aviation regulators, has solely had orders from Chinese language clients and two airways in Brunei and Cambodia – each shut allies of Beijing.
Aviation consultancy IBA stated final month that COMAC’s C919 manufacturing targets had been bold and it anticipated “extra measured progress” from the producer.
IBA forecast round 18 C919s could be delivered in 2025 and 25 in 2026, rising to about 45 in 2027.
China Japanese, Air China and China Southern every ordered 100 of the jets.
(Reporting by Lisa Barrington in Seoul; Further reporting by Sophie Yu in Beijing; Modifying by Jamie Freed)