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Brunei enables China-made jets to boost COMAC

Brunei is the latest country that allows its airlines to use Chinese-made planes, according to new regulations published by Brunei’s aviation regulator on Thursday. This comes as a major boost to Shanghai-based COMAC.

Brunei may be a small country, but Beijing is watching closely each aircraft made in China that is exported abroad. Beijing is looking for international acceptance as the aerospace industry struggles to meet the demand for new planes at a time where it is also caught up in the global trade conflict.

State-owned COMAC wants to compete with dominant planemakers Airbus and Boeing, but it lacks key certifications by Western regulators. The company also hasn't secured an order outside China from a major airline.

Beijing, to show that its planes were in use, has placed C909s on airlines in Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam.

GallopAir is a Brunei based start-up carrier that has ordered C909s and has Chinese investment backing.

It ordered 15 C909s in 2023 and 15 narrow-body C919s, COMAC's newer, larger model. This was the first C919 purchase by a non Chinese airline.

The Department of Civil Aviation in Brunei (DCA), previously, would only accept planes with design certifications from U.S. regulators or those of Canada, Europe, and Brazil. This included aircraft manufactured by Boeing, Airbus, and Embraer.

The amendment published by the aviation body on Thursday added the Civil Aviation Authority of China, a regulator to its list.

Documents from the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam show that in April Vietnam added CAAC on its list of approved aviation regulatory bodies.

COMAC CEO Cham Chi stated that the company has not yet delivered any aircraft to GallopAir. It is also unclear when it will make its first delivery.

In 2016, the C909 jet engine-powered aircraft, with up to 90 seats was China's very first commercially produced plane.

COMAC launched the C919 in order to compete with the Airbus A320neo, Boeing 737 MAX and other popular narrow-body aircraft. Currently, the C919 is only used by Chinese Airlines.

According to filings by the three airlines who fly this model, COMAC is behind schedule in delivering its C919 narrow-body commercial plane. (Reporting and editing by Thomas Derpinghaus, Tomaszjanowski and Lisa Barrington)

(source: Reuters)