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China Airborne

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China Airborne

Knopf,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Text available

What's inside?

Will China’s massive expansion scheme and airport modernization take off or crash land?

Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative

Recommendation

Journalist James Fallows offers a detailed report on China’s emerging aviation sector, and he is certainly the man for the job: Fallows is a China hand, speaks Chinese and is an instrument-rated pilot. He maintains an attitude of watchful equivocation, and his overview proves authoritative, comprehensive, insightful and even surprising. getAbstract recommends this outstanding analysis of the Chinese aviation industry’s politics, planned growth, technological victories and environmental concerns. Will China succeed in the ambitious modernization and expansion of its aviation sector? Read this flyover to find out for yourself.

Summary

Blue Skies for China?

Today, most of the action in the high-end global aviation market takes place in Asia, and China is the dominant force. Every two years, it hosts the popular Zhuhai International Air Show, where aviation merchants sell expensive airplanes and where other aerospace professionals line up contacts and new business.

At Zhuhai, representatives of European and American architecture firms battle for the contracts to design some of the 150 new airports that China plans to build in the near future. Professionals and businesspeople seek to profit from the thousands of new airliners, business jets, small aircraft and helicopters that will fly through China’s skies in the coming years. Airbus, Boeing and aviation firms from diverse nations, including Israel, Brazil and Russia, sponsor booths at the Zhuhai show.

China is rushing to modernize, expand its aviation industry and become a world leader in the production of giant airliners. This ambition aligns with other fevered economic developments that have transformed China into a manufacturing superpower.

Experts predict that China’s passenger air traffic will double every five years. In total, ...

About the Author

James Fallows is a, veteran correspondent for The Atlantic Monthly, a regular commentator on National Public Radio, and is a former editor of US News and World Report. He won the US National Book Award for National Defense.


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