Moderators: jsumali2, richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
JustSomeDood wrote:Could they even fly to overseas markets with the (lack of) regulatory approval both aircraft currently have with the relevant authorities?
Newbiepilot wrote:JustSomeDood wrote:Could they even fly to overseas markets with the (lack of) regulatory approval both aircraft currently have with the relevant authorities?
If they want to use the plane to Africa, I believe China may have enough governmental pressure to get certain countries to approve the planes.
chrisp390 wrote:What sane company would order 100 planes that in their initial operation cannot even do intacity flights in China without major issues! On top of that this is a company that was recently having many financial problems.
I think there is much more to this deal than meets the eye.
FlyHappy wrote:chrisp390 wrote:What sane company would order 100 planes that in their initial operation cannot even do intacity flights in China without major issues! On top of that this is a company that was recently having many financial problems.
I think there is much more to this deal than meets the eye.
You will likely find a reversal of fortunes for HNA in the near future.
chrisp390 wrote:What sane company would order 100 planes that in their initial operation cannot even do intacity flights in China without major issues! On top of that this is a company that was recently having many financial problems.
I think there is much more to this deal than meets the eye.
FlyHappy wrote:This deal is all of those things the cynics say, this is true.
But I cannot fault the PRC for this kind of maneuver (including how they will undoubtedly "encourage" the African market); this is exactly how they have climbed out of a nearly medieval deep hole in a span of only 70 years. This is how they have improved the fortunes for their own people - their way.
I always laugh at the posters here on a.net who so casually disparage Chinese industry with such off handed slights about lack of quality, or "they can only copy", etc.
They will be a legit competitor to the duopoly someday; probably sooner than you think.
Never underestimate the Chinese.
Varsity1 wrote:Reminds me of aeroflot.
LAX772LR wrote:Wow, and they were the ones I thought would be the most immune to government pressure to buy these. Interesting.
thekorean wrote:FlyHappy wrote:
Never underestimate the Chinese.
Should they really want African countries buying these planes?
Not all countries in Africa of course, but some of the county's safety standard is....suspicious to say the least.
keesje wrote:Wow, how unfair, aerospace industry should be able to hold their own. Let free market mechanisms do their work. Government should stay out!
https://o.aolcdn.com/images/dims3/GLOB/legacy_thumbnail/1028x675/format/jpg/quality/85/http%3A%2F%2Fo.aolcdn.com%2Fhss%2Fstorage%2Fmidas%2F239985ba048eaad9b600e50b3943368e%2F205408349%2Fpresident-donald-trump-addresses-a-crowd-during-the-debut-event-for-picture-id642426576
https://www.google.nl/amp/s/www.cbc.ca/amp/1.4308590
It's like the cold war again, we only see what fits our believes & preferences.
JustSomeDood wrote:Could they even fly to overseas markets with the (lack of) regulatory approval both aircraft currently have with the relevant authorities?
Sean-SAN- wrote:Is HNA paying for these with their vast cash reserves or their sterling credit worthiness?
JoeCanuck wrote:The "Buy Chinese" policy is just crazy. Any country with a wildly xenophobic and jingoistic policy like that would be ridiculed.
iceberg210 wrote:ARJ orders? Usually I congratulate for orders, but that plane has turned out nothing to a curse to everyone involved
Interesting to me that they haven't abandoned it as a learning experience instead of trying to keep pushing something that is such a burden to it's operators.
JustSomeDood wrote:Could they even fly to overseas markets with the (lack of) regulatory approval both aircraft currently have with the relevant authorities?
China's top leaders have agreed to help debt-laden conglomerate HNA Group Co raise funds
A senior official at the People's Bank of China, on Tuesday, led a meeting with three regulators, the Hainan provincial government, HNA's co-chairman Chen Feng and the company's biggest creditor, asking the attendees to support HNA's future bond issues
Spacepope wrote:100 ARJ-21? That's like another century worth of production.
FlyHappy wrote:This deal is all of those things the cynics say, this is true.
But I cannot fault the PRC for this kind of maneuver (including how they will undoubtedly "encourage" the African market); this is exactly how they have climbed out of a nearly medieval deep hole in a span of only 70 years. This is how they have improved the fortunes for their own people - their way.
I always laugh at the posters here on a.net who so casually disparage Chinese industry with such off handed slights about lack of quality, or "they can only copy", etc.
They will be a legit competitor to the duopoly someday; probably sooner than you think.
Never underestimate the Chinese.
WPvsMW wrote:With all that PRC govt money, HNA can now buy AI, get an LoTA from DCGA for both types, and fly the Hump. [/humour]
downdata wrote:lol its 93 billion. 93 million would have been a non-issue.
MalevTU134 wrote:WPvsMW wrote:With all that PRC govt money, HNA can now buy AI, get an LoTA from DCGA for both types, and fly the Hump. [/humour]
People would probably appreciate and understand your jokes if you didn't use acronyms...