China to freeze aircraft orders in 2005 (Agencies) Updated: 2004-12-30 11:13
China will not approve any new commercial aircraft purchases in 2005 in an
effort to curb "over-heated" growth in the sector and uncontrolled capacity
expansion by domestic airlines, Reuters quoted a Chinese government official as
saying.
Even though aircraft manufacturer Boeing Co., and a few analysts said the
company will not be affected by the decision, Boeing shares fell more than 2
percent on the news.
Yang Yuanyuan, director general of the General Administration of Civil
Aviation of China, told a Chinese industry forum this week that domestic
airlines have already ordered enough planes to meet their requirements next
year.
"Chinese airlines have already bought and arranged to be shipped next year a
total of 147 planes," Yang said in comments published on the Web site of CAAC
News, a newspaper run by the aviation agency.
"This basically suits the needs of the market's growth," he said, adding that
no additional purchases will be approved in 2005.
The move comes amid efforts by aircraft manufacturers Boeing and Airbus to
tap into China's growth.
Both aircraft makers are currently discussing deals with China, trying to
sell the country their latest and most expensive planes -- the Boeing 7E7
wide-body jet and the Airbus superjumbo A380 aircraft.
Boeing said the decision to freeze orders in 2005 will have no impact on its
ongoing discussions. "We are looking at what their plans are beyond 2005," Bob
Saling, a Boeing spokesman told Reuters on Wednesday. "This does not affect our
ongoing discussions with them. They continue to be a strong growth market for
us."
Prudential Equity Group analyst Jared Muroff also said China's plans will not
impact Boeing's delivery pattern in 2005. "Chinese orders for the 7E7 should be
unaffected by this policy as the plane will not ship until 2008," he added.
Still, Boeing shares fell $1.15, or 2.2 percent, to $52.09 in early afternoon
trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
Airbus officials were not immediately available for comment.
Air travel is taking off in China, fueled by rising incomes, a growing number
of approved tourist destinations for its 1.3 billion people, and accelerating
business travel.
U.S. aircraft manufacturer Boeing has predicted that China, within 20 years,
will become the world's second-largest commercial aviation market, behind the
United States.
The company said China will need 2,300 planes over the next two decades, as
increasingly well-off Chinese take to the air. It is slugging it out with
European competitor Airbus EADS for a share of new aircraft orders.
China Eastern Airlines, which commands the country's second-largest
commercial fleet, on Friday said it will buy six Boeing Co. 737-700 jets for
about $240 million to meet booming air travel demand. Those planes will be
delivered in 2006.
In October, Airbus confirmed an order for 20 of its A330 wide-body jets for
China Eastern.
It was reported last week that Shanghai should see traffic rise by almost
half this year, to about 36 million passengers.