These two stories had to be placed side-by-side, because while they are unrelated in subject matter, they are very related. Access to China is tops on the minds of every aerospace company on Earth and with the Comac ARJ21 coming online and the C919 not far behind, what happens to joint ventures with Chinese companies once domestically made competing products are available is anyone’s guess, but this episode may serve as a guide for the future.
Shot:
“Very few
customers today are willing to purchase aerospace products or services
without expecting some form of industrial partnership, through global
supply chains”.-Boeing CEO Jim McNerney
McNerney tells unions Boeing’s global supply chain is crucial
Seattle Times
October 7, 2010
Chaser:
Brazil Doesn’t Expect China To Approve Embraer Plans To Stay
Wall Street Journal
October 7, 2010SAO PAULO (Dow Jones)–Brazil’s Empresa Brasileira de Aeronautica
SA (ERJ, EMBR3.BR) likely won’t get authorization from China to change
over production lines, meaning the company will probably close its
factory in the Asian country in 2011, a person in the Brazilian
government said Friday.Embraer, as the world’s fourth-largest plane maker is known, is
phasing out construction of its 50-seat ERJ-145 plane after it delivers
the last of its orders in March. Embraer sees no demand in the region
for the smaller airplane and is seeking authorization from China’s
government to begin production on larger, 120-seat planes, the
company’s press office said Thursday.
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This post originally appeared at Flightglobal.com from 2007 to 2012.