Boeing Delivers First Airplane from New 737 Completion and Delivery Center in Zhoushan, China

(Image source: Imaginechina)

Boeing  and joint venture partner Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, Ltd  (COMAC) marked the delivery of the first aircraft from the new 737 Completion and Delivery Center in Zhoushan, China. Beijing-based international airline Air China  received the first aircraft, signaling a new era in Boeing's partnership with the Chinese aviation industry.

Delivery of the first Boeing 737 MAX 8 , assembled in Renton, Washington and completed in China, comes 20 months after construction began at the 100-acre Zhoushan site – the first such Boeing facility outside of the United States. The facility has been built in partnership with the Zhejiang Provincial and Zhoushan Municipal Governments and will become fully operational in phases as capacity is expanded over time.

"This moment signifies our growing partnership with China that stretches back over nearly half a century," says Boeing Commercial Airplanes President and CEO Kevin McAllister. "We're proud of our long relationship with the Chinese government, airlines and industry partners and the trust they place in Boeing."

Boeing 737 MAX aircraft for Chinese airlines will be flown from Seattle to Zhoushan, where the joint Boeing-COMAC Completion Center will complete interior work on the airplanes. The statement of work will gradually expand to include painting with the addition of three paint hangers. Once completed, aircraft will move to the adjacent Boeing-operated delivery center for customer acceptance activities and delivery formalities.

"Congratulations to Boeing for delivering the first 737 MAX from Zhoushan," says Zhao Yuerang, president of COMAC. "This is a significant milestone of Boeing's efforts to deepen its footprint in China, as well as to support the growth of China's airline industry, opening an era of the collaboration between the two airplane manufacturers of us."

The facility, which covers 666,000 square feet, is designed to support the entire 737 MAX aircraft family, from the long-range MAX 7 to the high-capacity MAX 10.

With about one third of all 737 deliveries going to Chinese customers, the Zhoushan facility will enable Chinese airline customers to update and expand their fleets with the most technologically-advanced Boeing single-aisle airplanes available. In addition, the business and the partnerships Boeing is developing in China are integral to adding capacity and aerospace jobs in the U.S.

China is on course to become the largest commercial aviation market in the world. Boeing's latest Commercial Market Outlook forecasts that China will need 7,680 new airplanes worth $1.2 trillion over the next 20 year and another $1.5 trillion in commercial services to support the country's growing fleet of airplanes.

COMAC also manufacturers China's C919 passenger jet, a direct competitor to the Boeing 737. Orders were approaching 1,000 earlier this year.

William Kucinski  is content editor at SAE International, Aerospace Products Group in Warrendale, Pa. Previously, he worked as a writer at the NASA Safety Center in Cleveland, Ohio and was responsible for writing the agency’s System Failure Case Studies. His interests include literally anything that has to do with space, past and present military aircraft, and propulsion technology.

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