Summary
- Six-day China International Aviation & Aerospace Exhibition begins on Tuesday
- China to unveil J-35A stealth fighter at Zhuhai air show
- Beijing aims for aerospace self-reliance, military dominance in Asia
SEOUL/BEIJING, Nov 8 (Reuters) – China’s new J-35A stealth fighter jet will be displayed for the first time next week at the country’s biggest civil and military air show, a biennial event where Beijing showcases its expanding aerospace industry.
The six-day China International Aviation & Aerospace Exhibition begins on Tuesday in the southern Greater Bay city of Zhuhai. The 2022 edition of the event led to about $40 billion in “cooperation agreements” being signed, according to its organisers.
Developing domestic aerospace design and manufacturing capabilities is a major strategic priority for Beijing as it vies for regional military dominance with the U.S. amid escalating tensions around Taiwan and the South China Sea.
China also seeks to reduce its reliance on foreign imports, a concern borne out after the election as the next U.S. president this week of Donald Trump, who has been vocal about increasing trade tariffs and decoupling supply chains from the world’s second-largest economy.
Alongside drones, weapons systems, aircraft and electronic warfare technologies, China’s emerging role as a commercial airliner manufacturer through state-owned planemaker COMAC will be on display.
FIGHTER JET
As the expected highlight of the show, the People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) will reveal to the public the Shenyang Aircraft Corporation’s J-35A, which the air force last week described as a “medium-sized stealth multi-purpose fighter”.
Russia has also flown its most advanced fighter jet, the SU-57, to Zhuhai for its first air show abroad, in an apparent message to the West about China-Russia cooperation.
The J-35A, which uses airstrips to take off and land, is a variant of the J-35, a stealthy aircraft China is developing for use on aircraft carriers. Little is known about its performance or capabilities, although it superficially resembles the Lockheed Martin (LMT.N), F-35.
The J-35 program is a follow-on from China’s J-31 fighter, which made its public debut at the Zhuhai show in 2014 but was never used by the People’s Liberation Army or sold to foreign customers.
Diplomats and security analysts have closely watched the evolution of J-35 variants given the importance of the plane to China’s aircraft carrier program, which seeks to expand jets’ range and payload to project power beyond China’s home waters.
Monday marks the 75th anniversary of the PLAAF, which will have its largest presence at the air show, Xinhua news agency has reported.
COMAC
This year’s Zhuhai air show is its first post-pandemic edition since Beijing lifted its zero-COVID policy and travel restrictions in 2023.
Airbus (AIR.PA), and the world’s third-largest planemaker, Embraer (EMBR3.SA), will have a presence at the show, but Boeing (BA.N), will not be officially represented after new CEO Kelly Ortberg halted travel to industry events as the troubled U.S. manufacturer recovers from a damaging seven-week workers’ strike that ended this week.
Beijing has invested heavily in developing home-grown commercial planes, and engines that one day may replace the foreign versions that currently power COMAC’s jets.
COMAC-watchers will, in particular, be paying attention to a possible re-branding of the company’s ARJ21 regional jet, after one was spotted by aviation enthusiasts in mid-October at a Chinese airport with C909 painted on its blue tail, instead of ARJ21.
Although largely symbolic, the change – which would align with the manufacturer’s naming convention for its other models – signals Beijing’s growing intention to present itself as a full-scale alternative to Airbus and Boeing, which are both struggling to keep up with demand.
Industry sources say COMAC is a long way off from making inroads internationally without benchmark certifications from the EU – which COMAC is pursuing for its C919 airliner – or the U.S.
In particular, competing with Western engines poses one of the most daunting challenges for China’s rising aerospace industry, even after a spate of industrial problems in the West.
Even so, Chinese manufacturers will benefit from the sheer scale of their domestic market, analysts say. China is the world’s second-largest domestic aviation market after the U.S.
Boeing has said China will more than double its commercial airplane fleet and need 8,830 new planes by 2043.
Reporting by Lisa Barrington, Sophie Yu, Gerry Doyle, Greg Torode and Tim Hepher; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman