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Made-in-China plane makes first commercial flight

BEIJING — China’s homegrown regional jet made its first commercial flight on Tuesday (June 28), operator Chengdu Airlines said, after years of delays raised questions about the country’s ambitious plans for domestically produced planes.

China's first domestic regional jet ARJ21-700 arrives at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport after making its first flight from Chengdu on June 28, 2016. Photo: AFP

China's first domestic regional jet ARJ21-700 arrives at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport after making its first flight from Chengdu on June 28, 2016. Photo: AFP

BEIJING — China’s homegrown regional jet made its first commercial flight on Tuesday (June 28), operator Chengdu Airlines said, after years of delays raised questions about the country’s ambitious plans for domestically produced planes.

Chengdu Airlines flew the ARJ21 from its eponymous home base, the capital of the southwestern province of Sichuan, to the commercial hub Shanghai carrying 70 passengers.

More than half were paying customers who were aware they were flying in a new plane, an airline spokesman told AFP.

The ARJ21 — which stands for Advanced Regional Jet for the 21st Century — will ferry flyers on the Chengdu-Shanghai route three times a week, he added.

The inaugural flight was the culmination of a 14-year programme to make China a commercial aircraft manufacturer capable of competing with dominant foreign players Boeing and Airbus.

But the aircraft still lacks the crucial US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) certification that would allow it to fly in US skies, and most manufacturers do not yet view the COMAC plane as a competitive threat.

Even so, the Chinese commercial aircraft market is already Asia’s largest and crucial to aerospace plans over the next decades.

Pictures of the ARJ21 inaugural flight showed a patriotic spirit among the passengers, with some waving Chinese flags and signing their names on a memorial banner, flanked by people in panda costumes.

First formally approved by the government in 2002, the plane was shown to journalists five years later, when officials confidently predicted deliveries in late 2009.

Chengdu Airlines finally received the aircraft from manufacturer the Commercial Aircraft Corp of China (COMAC) last November, and it made several “demonstration” flights without passengers in January.

While the debut commercial flight is a landmark for COMAC, the ARJ21’s quality and reliability still have to be established to win over customer and passenger confidence.

The plane can seat 78-90 passengers and has a range of 2,225km to 3,700km.

State-owned COMAC has claimed more than 270 orders for the ARJ21, mainly from domestic customers. AFP

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