FAA Opens Certification Office In China

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Key Takeaways:

  • The FAA opened an office in Shanghai to expedite the development of China's new ARJ-21 regional jet, facilitating the use of U.S. technology and parts for the aircraft.
  • This move aims to capitalize on China's burgeoning aviation market, which presents significant opportunities for U.S. suppliers, despite domestic concerns about FAA staff shortages.
  • FAA certification of the ARJ-21 would legitimize it as a competitor in the growing regional jet market, currently dominated by Bombardier and Embraer.
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As U.S. aircraft manufacturers continue to complain about the shortage of FAA inspectors and certification staff on home turf comes word that the agency is reaching out to China to speed development of its new regional jet program. The FAA opened an office in Shanghai last Friday aimed at funneling U.S. technology into the new ARJ-21, a 70-to-100-seat twinjet thats expected to fly early next year. About 40 percent of the aircrafts parts will come from foreign suppliers, many of them American, and the new office is expected to help smooth that process. “This is certainly facilitating the exchange of aeronautical products between the United States and China,” John Hickey, head of certification services for the FAA, told The Associated Press. The burgeoning aviation market in China is seen as a pot of gold for U.S. companies but the Chinese bureaucracy has been slow to adapt to the opportunities and demand. The FAAs stamp of approval on the ARJ-21 would make it a legitimate contender in the still-growing RJ market, which is now dominated by Canadas Bombardier and Brazils Embraer. Despite the bureaucratic challenges of operating in China, several U.S. companies have opened there, including FedEx, which is building a hub in the business center of Guangzhou in southern China.

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