Airbus and China have laid the foundation for
taking their cooperation into the future as agreements were signed
last week in Paris by Fabrice Brégier, Airbus President and CEO,
and the Chinese parties, witnessed by the French President
Francois Hollande and visiting Chinese President Xi Jinping. In
parallel, China Aviation Supplies Holding Company (CAS) and Airbus
have also signed a General Terms Agreement (GTA) for the purchase
of 70 Airbus aircraft.
Among the total of 70 Airbus aircraft ordered by
CAS, there are 43 A320 Family aircraft and 27 A330 aircraft.
According to the agreements, Airbus will
strengthen its mutually beneficial cooperation with Chinese
aviation industry in various fields, which include promoting
Tianjin as an Asian Centre for Airbus and upgrading industrial
cooperation in both scale and level.
Airbus and
its Chinese partners Tianjin Free Trade Zone and Aviation Industry
Corporation of China (AVIC), have agreed to extend the successful
Joint Venture to assemble A320 Family aircraft in China (FALC
project) for an additional 10 years. The “phase II” will cover the
period from 2016 to 2025, expand deliveries to the whole Asian
region and include final assembly of the A320neo Family from 2017
onwards. During Phase II, capabilities of the Tianjin Final
Assembly Line will be extended.
Airbus and the Chinese
parties will jointly invite more major component suppliers to
develop industrial projects in Tianjin, in order to support the
development of the FALC and the formation of a competitive supply
chain.
To accommodate the strong growth of the
Chinese aviation, which is growing much faster than the world
average, and to ensure its sustainability, the future partnership
is also designed to focus on alleviating these challenges by
launching two other areas of cooperation; supporting the CAAC with
the latest state of the art Air Traffic Management (ATM) in order
to boost the capacity of Chinese airspace, and driving research
into regional sustainable jetfuel and other initiatives in order
to reduce the Chinese aviation environmental footprint.
Airbus and relevant Chinese
parties will also work towards demonstrating the interest of setting up
a wide-body aircraft completion centre in China, which includes
cooperation on wide-body cabin interiors with AVIC.
“We are going to celebrate 30 years of
successful cooperation with our Chinese partners next year and I
am proud that today we are strengthening the foundation for
extending our successful cooperation into the future,” said Fabrice Bregier, Airbus President and CEO. “Our partnership with
China, the mutual benefits we’ve explored, have been instrumental
in furthering our global strategy, and we are honoured to have
China as an essential pillar in our global setup. We are looking
forward to providing top performing aircraft from our Chinese
assembly lines for many years to come.”
Airbus,
Tianjin,
China
|