Boeing: No plans to open China factory
(AP) Updated: 2006-10-31 15:00
ZHUHAI, China - Boeing Co has no plans to imitate rival Airbus Industrie
by opening a Chinese factory, the president of Boeing China said Tuesday,
dismissing it as a symbolic step the US aircraft maker doesn't need to take to
win orders.
"We have no plans to set up an assembly line at this time,"
David Wang said at China's biggest air show in this southern city. "We do not
believe symbolic investments lead to good business partnerships."
Boeing
and Airbus are competing fiercely for market share in China, the world's
fastest-growing aircraft market. Chicago-based Boeing says it expects Chinese
carriers to purchase 2,900 new planes worth US$280 billion (euro220 billion)
over the next 20 years. Airbus signed agreements last week to open a
final assembly line in China, its first outside Europe, and China ordered 150
mid-size A320 aircraft to be produced there. The planes at the facility in the
eastern city of Tianjin will be assembled from components manufactured in
Europe.
Boeing is contributing to China's economy by working with
Chinese parts suppliers, Wang said. The company says it has bought Chinese-made
components, including doors and wing parts, worth a total of US$730 million
(euro574 million) over the past two decades.
The company also has three
Chinese joint ventures, one making advanced materials, another converting used
747 jumbo jets for use as cargo planes and the third to service aircraft.
"We have not demanded more orders" in exchange for those investments, Wang
said. "But we think that because we work closely with the Chinese, we will get
our fair share."
Wang was attending the five-day China International
Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition, held once every two years in Zhuhai.
Boeing's displays at the show included a mock-up of part of the
passenger cabin of its planned long-range 787 Dreamliner and scale models of its
other planes.
Boeing accounts for about 60 percent of the approximately
900 aircraft in China's commercial fleets, while Airbus says its aircraft
account for about 35 percent.
Chinese carriers have signed orders for
220 Boeing aircraft over the past two years, including a cargo version of its
planned 777 long-range plane, due to start deliveries in 2008, said Randy
Baseler, Boeing's vice president for marketing.
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