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Source: US allows GE to restart jet engine shipments from China's COMAC

According to a source familiar with the situation, the U.S. informed GE Aerospace that it could restart jet engine shipments from China to COMAC on Thursday. This is a sign that U.S. and Sino trade tensions are easing, as Beijing has made concessions over rare earths.

This week, the United States also lifted export restrictions to China on chip design software developers as well as ethane manufacturers. This suggests that trade negotiations between China and the United States are progressing.

As part of the ongoing global trade war, the two largest economies have issued new licensing requirements and license suspensions on different exports.

GE and the Commerce Department did not respond to a request for comment sent via email.

The licenses granted to GE Aerospace concern engines sold to China’s state-owned aerospace company COMAC. COMAC wants to compete with dominant plane makers Airbus & Boeing.

A spokesperson from the Chinese Embassy in Washington didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment.

These restrictions were one of many countermeasures taken by the U.S. administration under President Donald Trump in response to China’s April export restrictions on rare Earths and magnets.

Beijing's action on rare earths as a retaliation to Trump's tariffs earlier this year has upset supply chains that are important for automakers, aerospace companies, semiconductor companies, and military contractors. This issue threatened to derail a bilateral deal.

According to a person familiar with the matter, who declined identification because they weren't authorized to speak in public, the license suspensions lifted by GE concern LEAP-1C engines for COMAC C919 single aisle aircraft and GE's CF34 engines for COMAC C909 regional aircraft.

The LEAP 1C engines are a product of GE Aerospace's joint venture with France's Safran.

C919 is manufactured in China, but many of the components are imported.

According to a person who refused to name the company, at least one other aeronautical company had their license suspensions lifted for China on Thursday.

Honeywell Aerospace also supplied COMAC’s C919 with an auxiliary power unit, wheels and brakes as well as a flight control package and navigation package. Honeywell has not responded to a request for a comment.

Collins Aerospace is a subsidiary company of RTX that also supplies COMAC with components. Collins Aerospace declined to comment about the license status.

The U.S. has also suspended the licenses of nuclear equipment suppliers who sell to China. Westinghouse, Emerson and other U.S. suppliers of nuclear equipment are among them. Reporting by Karen Freifeld, New York; editing by Bill Berkrot Chris Sanders and Daniel Wallis

(source: Reuters)