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BEIJING, April 12 -- China Eastern Airlines, the
nation's third largest carrier, has placed a $924 million order for 16 Boeing
737 aircraft to expand its domestic fleet, the company said in a notice to the
Shanghai Stock Exchange yesterday.
The deal is part of a US$5 billion order for as many
as 80 Boeing planes that is due to be signed today in Washington during Chinese
Vice-Premier Wu Yi's visit to the United States, a source close to the deal told
China Daily yesterday. Boeing's contract may be announced at a summit sponsored
by the US Commerce Department.
The mega deal, plus a previous one signed last
November for 70 B737s, may help Chicago-based Boeing keep its sales lead over
Europe's Airbus in China.
The 80 aircraft will all be single-aisle B737-700 and
B737-800 models, said the source, who declined to be named.
Besides China Eastern, seven other Chinese carriers
China Southern Airlines, Air China, Hainan Airlines, Shanghai Airlines, Shenzhen
Airlines, Xiamen Airlines, Shandong Airlines will receive the aircraft, earlier
media reports said.
"The large purchase for mid-range airplanes such as
B737s reflects the rising market demand for domestic air travel in China," said
Liu Weimin, director of the Aviation Laws Research Centre at the Civil Aviation
Management Institute of China.
"With their disposable incomes increasing, a growing
number of Chinese will choose airplanes as the ideal choice for domestic
travel."
"Sticking to a few fleet types also helps airlines
lower operating costs in terms of maintenance, repairs and personnel training,"
Liu added.
China Eastern said in the notice that the order for
the new airplanes would "satisfy the fast growing market demand for mid and
short-range domestic air travel in the coming years" and would help the carrier
strengthen its mid and short-range air route network in China.
The General Administration of Civil Aviation of China
said China would have 1,580 aircraft by 2010, nearly double the current number.
Chinese carriers may buy about 2,600 new aircraft by 2024, according to a Boeing
forecast released last year.
The US aircraft manufacturer sold its first plane to
China in 1972, 13 years ahead of Airbus. Boeing controlled 61 per cent of
China's commercial airplane market by the end of last year.
Airbus signed its largest single deal when it sold
150 A320s to six Chinese airlines at the end of last year when Premier Wen
Jiabao visited France. The deal is worth nearly US$10 billion.
According to a memorandum of understanding signed
during the premier's trip to France, China will become the first country outside
Europe to build Airbus aircraft. Tianjin, Shanghai, Xi'an of Shaanxi Province
and Zhuhai of Guangdong Province are four candidate cities for the final
assembling line for the A320 family single-aisle aircraft.
Also yesterday, China Eastern reported a net loss of
438.7 million yuan (US$54.5 million) for 2005 under international accounting
standard, compared with a 2004 profit of 456.4 million yuan (US$56.7 million).
The Shanghai-based carrier said it suffered from a 64
per cent jump in fuel costs and a 61 per cent increase in maintenance costs
after it expanded its fleet last year.
(Source:China
Daily) |