China plans maiden flight of C919 jetliner around May 5 - sources

Reuters  |  PARIS/SHANGHAI 

PARIS/(Reuters) - plans to stage the maiden of its C919 passenger jet on or around May 5, two people familiar with the project said.

Commercial Aircraft Corporation of (COMAC) has completed ground-testing and is preparing the aircraft for its much-delayed debut flight, which could provide an historic boost to China's efforts to compete with global aircraft makers.

The C919's maiden has been delayed at least twice since 2014 due to production issues.

first gave the world a glimpse of the 158-seat plane in November 2015 at a roll-out ceremony in

The aircraft is a symbol of China's ambitions to break into a duopoly enjoyed by Western giants Airbus and Boeing . Russia is developing a similar jet.

Eastern Airlines is the launch customer for the plane, which is powered by engines from French-U.S. supplier CFM International, jointly owned by General Electric and Safran.

In another sign of China's growing presence in aviation, its safety certification authority will host foreign regulators and suppliers at a conference organised jointly with European safety authorities in this week.

A third source said that had initially aimed to fly the C919 to coincide with the first such Chinese-European safety event but that the date had slipped into the first week of May.

(Reporting by Tim Hepher and Brenda Goh; Editing by David Clarke and Hugh Lawson)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

China plans maiden flight of C919 jetliner around May 5 - sources

PARIS/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China plans to stage the maiden flight of its C919 passenger jet on or around May 5, two people familiar with the project said.

PARIS/(Reuters) - plans to stage the maiden of its C919 passenger jet on or around May 5, two people familiar with the project said.

Commercial Aircraft Corporation of (COMAC) has completed ground-testing and is preparing the aircraft for its much-delayed debut flight, which could provide an historic boost to China's efforts to compete with global aircraft makers.

The C919's maiden has been delayed at least twice since 2014 due to production issues.

first gave the world a glimpse of the 158-seat plane in November 2015 at a roll-out ceremony in

The aircraft is a symbol of China's ambitions to break into a duopoly enjoyed by Western giants Airbus and Boeing . Russia is developing a similar jet.

Eastern Airlines is the launch customer for the plane, which is powered by engines from French-U.S. supplier CFM International, jointly owned by General Electric and Safran.

In another sign of China's growing presence in aviation, its safety certification authority will host foreign regulators and suppliers at a conference organised jointly with European safety authorities in this week.

A third source said that had initially aimed to fly the C919 to coincide with the first such Chinese-European safety event but that the date had slipped into the first week of May.

(Reporting by Tim Hepher and Brenda Goh; Editing by David Clarke and Hugh Lawson)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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