China to buy 300 jets, Boeing to build 737 plant there

  • Associated Press and Herald staff
  • Wednesday, September 23, 2015 6:25am
  • BusinessEverett

HONG KONG — Chinese companies have agreed with Boeing to buy 300 jets and build an aircraft plant in China in deals signed during President Xi Jinping’s visit to the United States, the official Xinhua news agency said Wednesday.

China Aviation Supplies Holding, ICBC Financial Leasing and China Development Bank Leasing inked the jet purchase agreement after Xi’s arrival in Seattle, Xinhua said. It did not give details of the plane models involved or the deal’s value.

State-owned Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, which is better known as COMAC, also signed a cooperation agreement with the U.S. plane maker to build a 737 assembly center in China.

Xi is due to visit Boeing’s Paine Field final-assembly plant in Everett during the Seattle leg of his trip before moving on to Washington, D.C., to meet President Barack Obama.

The deals were anticipated, prompting Boeing on Tuesday to tell its workers they would not mean a loss of jobs in Renton, where the 737 is assembled.

“These discussions are at a sensitive stage, and I appreciate your support as we finalize what I hope will be a win for Boeing, a win for the Puget Sound, and a win for our stakeholders,” wrote Boeing Commercial Airplanes President Ray Conner in an email to workers. “I want to assure you that agreements we may reach with our Chinese partners will not result in layoffs or reduce employment for the 737 program in Washington state.”

The plant in China would be Boeing’s first there and is an attempt to match its European rival Airbus’s Chinese presence as the two companies step up their efforts to win more business in the country’s lucrative aircraft market.

Airbus opened its first assembly line outside of Europe in 2008 with a Tianjin facility that turns out four A320 aircraft per month. In July, Airbus signed a deal for a second completion and delivery center for A330 jets.

Boeing sold a record 155 airplanes last year to customers in China, and so far this year a quarter of its jets have been delivered there. The company predicts that over the next two decades China will overtake the U.S. as the world’s biggest plane market with demand for 6,330 new airplanes worth an estimated $950 billion.

China’s state planning agency also signed an agreement with Boeing to promote cooperation in the aviation industry, Xinhua said.

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