Wednesday, 2 March 2016

Construction Starts on A330 Completions Center in China

From left to right, Tianjin vice mayor Duan Chunhua, China’s National Development and Reform Commission vice chairman Lin Nianxiu, Airbus president and CEO Fabrice BrĂ©gier and AVIC chairman Lin Zuoming pose in front of a rendering of the new A330 completion and delivery center in Tianjin, China. (Photo: Airbus)

Crews have begun construction on the new Airbus A330 completion and delivery center (C&DC) in Tianjin, China. Scheduled for opening in 2017, the facility will become Airbus’s first widebody completion center outside of Europe. The site of the A330 C&DC sits adjacent to the Airbus Tianjin A320 family final assembly line (FAL) and the Airbus Tianjin Delivery Center.
The ground breaking ceremony for the A330 C&DC in Tianjin marks a new milestone for Airbus’ international footprint and underlines the strong cooperation with our Chinese partners,” said Airbus president and CEOFabrice BrĂ©gier. “Airbus’ long-standing cooperation with China spans single aisle and now also widebody aircraft and we will continue to look for further opportunities in the future.”
Airbus, Tianjin Free Trade Zone (TJFTZ) and Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC) signed a framework agreement in the summer of 2014 calling for the establishment of an A330 C&DC in Tianjin. Plans call for the facility to engage in cabin installation, aircraft painting and flight test, as well as aircraft delivery and customer flight acceptance. Airbus will assemble the A330s completed at the Tianjin center in Toulouse.
Airbus’s bullish forecast for growth in passenger air traffic in China supports its cooperation with Chinese partners, the European company asserts. Its forecast calls for 6.9 percent average annual growth for the domestic air traffic market in China over the next 20 years and 6.8 percent for the Chinese international market over the same period. According to Airbus, a positive long-term economic outlook, a growing middle class and expansion in outbound tourism rank as the top underlying factors in its China forecast. 
According to Airbus’ 2015-2034 global market forecast (GMF), new deliveries of passenger aircraft carrying more than 100 seats and freighters weighing more than 10 metric tons for China will total about 5,400, including 3,630 single aisle aircraft and 1,770 twin-aisle and very large aircraft such as the A380. The figure amounts to about 17 percent of the world total demand for some 32,600 new aircraft over the same period. Airbus places the total market value of the new aircraft bound for delivery to China over the period at $840 billion.
Today, more than 170 A330s operate in China and Airbus collected orders for some 75 last year alone. Another 1,000 A320s operate in China, where one of four assembly sites for the narrowbodies resides.

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