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GE to Share Jet Technology with China

mrplunkey

New member
I guess technically Barry didn't specify which country Immelt was supposed to created jobs in as the chairman of his jobs council.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/18/business/global/18plane.html?pagewanted=all

But we can't blame them for making a large invesment. GE had some extra cash laying around after tax season.

Full Article Below

As China strives for leadership in the world’s most advanced industries, it sees commercial jetliners — planes that may someday challenge the best from Boeing and Airbus — as a top prize.

And no Western company has been more aggressive in helping China pursue that dream than one of the aviation industry’s biggest suppliers of jet engines and airplane technology, General Electric.

On Friday, during the visit of the Chinese president, Hu Jintao, to the United States, G.E. plans to sign a joint-venture agreement in commercial aviation that shows the tricky risk-and-reward calculations American corporations must increasingly make in their pursuit of lucrative markets in China.

G.E., in the partnership with a state-owned Chinese company, will be sharing its most sophisticated airplane electronics, including some of the same technology used in Boeing’s new state-of-the-art 787 Dreamliner.

For G.E., the pact is a chance to build upon an already well-established business in China, where the company has booming sales of jet engines, mainly to Chinese airlines that are now buying Boeing and Airbus planes. But doing business in China often requires Western multinationals like G.E. to share technology and trade secrets that might eventually enable Chinese companies to beat them at their own game — by making the same products cheaper, if not better.

The other risk is that Western technologies could help China play catch-up in military aviation — a concern underscored last week when the Chinese military demonstrated a prototype of its version of the Pentagon’s stealth fighter, even though the plane could be a decade away from production.

The first customer for the G.E. joint venture will be the Chinese company building a new airliner, the C919, that is meant to be China’s first entry in competition with Boeing and Airbus.

For the most part, Western aviation executives say the Chinese are simply too far behind in both civilian and military airplane technology to cause any real fears anytime soon — although it does put pressure on Boeing and Airbus to continue to innovate and stay technologically ahead of China.

G.E., which said it had briefed the commerce, defense and state departments on details of the deal, acknowledges that pairing up with a Chinese firm is a delicate dance. But because the commercial aircraft market in China is expected to generate sales of more than $400 billion over the next two decades, it is not a party the company is willing to miss.

Eventually, G.E. executives say, China will become a potent player in the commercial jetliner market, and the company wants to be a major supplier to the emerging Chinese producers.

“They are committed for the long term and they have every probability of being successful,” said John G. Rice, vice chairman of G.E. “We can participate in that or sit on the sidelines. We’re not about sitting on the sidelines.”

Mr. Rice also said that the Chinese joint venture partner — the aerospace design and equipment manufacturer Aviation Industry Corporation of China, or Avic — has supplied G.E. with some parts for jet engines for years. And he said he had personally known Avic’s president for a decade.

“This venture is a strategic move that we made after some thought and consideration, with a company we know,” Mr. Rice said. “This isn’t something we were forced into” by the Chinese government.

G.E.’s new joint venture in Shanghai will focus on avionics — the electronics for communications, navigation, cockpit displays and controls. G.E. will be contributing its leading-edge avionics technology — a high-performance core computer system that operates as the avionics brain of Boeing’s new 787 Dreamliner.

The joint venture has a ready customer in the C919’s builder, the Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China, which is also a government-owned enterprise. The plane will be a single-aisle airliner, carrying up to 200 passengers, intended to compete with Boeing 737s and Airbus 320s. Although the Chinese hope to begin deliveries in 2016, analysts say the schedule may well slip.

With or without the C919, the Chinese market for commercial airliners is already huge and growing fast — a big market for G.E. jet engines and other systems, as well as Boeing and Airbus planes. But if the C919 grabs any significant slice of that market, it would represent a new, expanded opportunity for G.E. The company has already been chosen to supply engines for the Chinese plane, through its long-standing partnership with Snecma of France. Though the world’s largest producer of jet engines, G.E. has trailed other suppliers of avionics in overall sales, behind Honeywell, Rockwell Collins and Thales, all of whom competed for the C919 business.

Several other American companies have also been chosen as suppliers for the C919 aircraft, providing power generators, fuel tanks, hydraulic controls, brakes, tires and other gear. The roster of United States suppliers includes Rockwell Collins, Honeywell, Hamilton Sundstrand, Parker Aerospace, Eaton Corporation and Kidde Aerospace.

In fact, the corporate competition for contracts on the C919 became a “frenzy,” said Mark Howes, president of Honeywell Aerospace Asia Pacific. The Chinese government, he said, had made it clear to Western companies that they should be “willing to share technology and know-how.”

But the G.E. avionics joint venture, analysts say, appears to be the deepest relationship yet and involves sharing the most confidential technology. And G.E.’s partner, Avic, also supplies China’s military aircraft and weapons systems.

G.E. executives would not comment on the details of the joint venture. But a person involved in the talks said the 50-50 venture is for 50 years. G.E., the person said, is putting in technology and start-up capital of $200 million. Avic will initially contribute $700 million, the person said, including the cost of a new research and development lab already under construction.

To address American government security concerns, the joint venture in Shanghai will occupy separate offices and be equipped with computer systems that cannot pass data to computers in Avic’s military division, G.E. executives say. And anyone working in the joint venture must wait two years before they can work on military projects at Avic, they added.

While Boeing and Airbus would probably rather not see their suppliers help the Chinese so much, both those companies must also constantly balance the risks and rewards of operating in China.

Boeing has subcontracted parts work to China for many years, and it is expanding a joint venture in Tianjin that makes parts with composite materials for several of its planes. And Airbus has built a factory that assembles A320s in the same city.

Boeing has “opted to accept the reality of both partnering and competing with China,” Boeing’s chief executive, W. James McNerney Jr., said in a speech last year.

Indeed, China’s push into the commercial aircraft industry will probably increase exports from American aviation equipment manufacturers for years to come, according to industry analysts. Whether China succeeds or fails, the state-owned companies will keep investing, generating sales for the suppliers.

The real concern lies further head, according to a study of China’s strategy included in a report published in November by a bipartisan Congressional advisory group, the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission.

The group concluded that China’s huge state subsidies for its own industry, its requirements that foreign companies provide technology and know-how to gain access to the Chinese market, along with the close ties between its commercial and military aviation sectors all raise concerns and “bear watching.”

The big aviation equipment makers say that, by now, they are experienced at grappling with matters of technology transfer in China. In Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Kent L. Statler, an executive vice president for commercial aviation at Rockwell Collins, observes that his employees often ask whether the company is trading its future for immediate sales in China.

“I think you’re naïve if you don’t take into account that you could be standing up a future competitor,” Mr. Statler said. Any company in a global business is in a race, he added, and staying ahead is the only defense. “At the end of the day, our technologies and processes have to continue to improve,” Mr. Statler said. “It comes down to who can innovate faster.”
 
Clif notes rob, for us foggoars !!!!

Jeff Immelt, CEO of GE and Chairman of Barry's Job's Council, has decided to spend $2B to teach the Chinese how to make the latest technology airplanes.

Initially the Chinese-based company will make planes to compete with Boeing and Airbus commercial airliners (it's stated purpose) but I'm sure they'll eventually expand into Chinese military aircraft.
 
jeff-immelt-ceo-of-ge-obama-s-blow-job-demotivational-poster-1236116674.jpg
 
Jeff Immelt, CEO of GE and Chairman of Barry's Job's Council, has decided to spend $2B to teach the Chinese how to make the latest technology airplanes.

Initially the Chinese-based company will make planes to compete with Boeing and Airbus commercial airliners (it's stated purpose) but I'm sure they'll eventually expand into Chinese military aircraft.
When do the Chinese get the ray guns? They can already kick ass with their kungfu.
 
And yet Barry will still have his head shoved up Jeff's ass.

Talk about being abused...
 
the G to the L to the O to the B to the A to the L to da I to the Z to the A to the T to the I to the O to the N

u mad?? @ obama?? lol explain that one plunk
 
I'm sure before signign the contract, the GE exec said "Oh btw, can you promise to increase human rights?"

Yeah right. Shows how much they care. Why aren't the hippies protesting GE for doing business with the chinese and not bring up human rights?

c
 
the G to the L to the O to the B to the A to the L to da I to the Z to the A to the T to the I to the O to the N

u mad?? @ obama?? lol explain that one plunk

On the contrary. I think it's awesome. It's free markets at work combined with the best of corporate cronyism.

It's a US-based company voting with its dollars. It just didn't be on US labor. That part is an ugly reality of today.

But the fact that Barry & co gave them the tax loopholes, bailout (GE Capital) and "green" welfare (GE Wind, GE Power) to make the investment in China makes it just that much sweeter.

If all that corporate welfare had gone to Haliburton under Bush, then they spent that money on China, do you think we'd be having congressional hearings by the next week?
 
On the contrary. I think it's awesome. It's free markets at work combined with the best of corporate cronyism.

It's a US-based company voting with its dollars. It just didn't be on US labor. That part is an ugly reality of today.

But the fact that Barry & co gave them the tax loopholes, bailout (GE Capital) and "green" welfare (GE Wind, GE Power) to make the investment in China makes it just that much sweeter.

If all that corporate welfare had gone to Haliburton under Bush, then they spent that money on China, do you think we'd be having congressional hearings by the next week?

holy shit do u get up at 4 in the mawnin WHOOOOOO WHOOOOP?

Bush was a little more tied to Halliburton than Obama is to GE I would say... but still you're right it's def a slap in the face

what's gonna be really cool is when China steals all GE's shit and becomes their biggest competitor instead of customer
 
Thats Capitolizm Buddy. It's Okay for Bankers,Hedge-Fund managers, and all the other CEO's. But now your upset? psh... You pretend like this is a new thing. Where the hell have you been for the past 20 years?
Boeing, Lockheed, BAE, Chrysler, have been doing this for decades with jet development. So what makes this news? Ohhh it has some supposed tie to Obama. Like he's on the Board of Directors of GE..... Hilarious
post some real news.
 
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Thats Capitolizm Buddy. It's Okay for Bankers,Hedge-Fund managers, and all the other CEO's. But now your upset? psh... You pretend like this is a new thing. Where the hell have you been for the past 20 years?
Boeing, Lockheed, BAE, Crysler, have been doing this for decades with jet development. So what makes this news? Ohhh it has some supposed tie to Obama. Like he's on the Board of Directors of GE..... Hilarious
post some real news.

lol settle down
 
Thats Capitolizm Buddy. It's Okay for Bankers,Hedge-Fund managers, and all the other CEO's. But now your upset? psh... You pretend like this is a new thing. Where the hell have you been for the past 20 years?
Boeing, Lockheed, BAE, Chrysler, have been doing this for decades with jet development. So what makes this news? Ohhh it has some supposed tie to Obama. Like he's on the Board of Directors of GE..... Hilarious
post some real news.

1) what part of "I think it's awesome" did you miss?

2) GE is a bank. And yes, they use finanacially exotic instruments just like those mean-old hedge fund guys do.

3) this is exactly how the system is supposed to work. Lobbyists mitigate tax exposure, secure bailouts (I.e. The GE Capital bailout package) and cash-grab government welfare for otherwise unviable energy sources like wind power. Then the reward for that package is shipping $2B (and the associated jobs) to China.

4) this isn't just the engine. This is the entire aircraft, including the aeronautics package. I'm basking in the irony that these packages will routinely incorporate integrated circuit chips banned for sale from the US to China. They'll probably ship them through an indian subsidiary. If we (I'm former GE) managed to get things to Iran, China should be a chip shot.
 
1) what part of "I think it's awesome" did you miss?

2) GE is a bank. And yes, they use finanacially exotic instruments just like those mean-old hedge fund guys do.

3) this is exactly how the system is supposed to work. Lobbyists mitigate tax exposure, secure bailouts (I.e. The GE Capital bailout package) and cash-grab government welfare for otherwise unviable energy sources like wind power. Then the reward for that package is shipping $2B (and the associated jobs) to China.

4) this isn't just the engine. This is the entire aircraft, including the aeronautics package. I'm basking in the irony that these packages will routinely incorporate integrated circuit chips banned for sale from the US to China. They'll probably ship them through an indian subsidiary. If we (I'm former GE) managed to get things to Iran, China should be a chip shot.

1)LOL, I missed the entire post about the Awesomeness.
2)And like I stated= NOT NEWS
3) It's not how the system is "supposed" to work. Read Some Thomas Jefferson.
4) Um, Like I said = NOT NEWS. Lockheed, Boeing,BAE have been sharing Aeronautics for DECADES. And your assumtion on IC chips is unfounded. The IC chips in aviation electronics are run of the mill. its the Programming thats whats important. Saudi's have been flying/training with American Jets with aeronautics packages here in the US for years. And guess what? We sell aeronautics to France and Italy and guess what???? They sell them to the middle east...
LOL, Not news... So tell me your expertise on Aeronautic systems? Because you have not Dog in this hunt Plunky. Trust me....
 
1)LOL, I missed the entire post about the Awesomeness.
2)And like I stated= NOT NEWS
3) It's not how the system is "supposed" to work. Read Some Thomas Jefferson.
4) Um, Like I said = NOT NEWS. Lockheed, Boeing,BAE have been sharing Aeronautics for DECADES. And your assumtion on IC chips is unfounded. The IC chips in aviation electronics are run of the mill. its the Programming thats whats important. Saudi's have been flying/training with American Jets with aeronautics packages here in the US for years. And guess what? We sell aeronautics to France and Italy and guess what???? They sell them to the middle east...
LOL, Not news... So tell me your expertise on Aeronautic systems? Because you have not Dog in this hunt Plunky. Trust me....

You're going to cite Thomas Jefferson as being the correct governmental philosophy? That must mean you hate BarryCare with every fiber of your being, correct?

Let me give you a few TJ quotes:

- The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government.

- Was the government to prescribe to us our medicine and diet, our bodies would be in such keeping as our souls are now.

- I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it.

- Laws that forbid the carrying of arms...disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes... Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, for an unarmed man may be attacked with greater confidence than an armed man.” (Quoting Cesare Beccaria)

- The beauty of the Second Amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it.

- The policy of the American government is to leave their citizens free, neither restraining nor aiding them in their pursuits.

- No man has a natural right to commit aggression on the equal rights of another, and this is all from which the laws ought to restrain him.

- To take from one because it is thought that his own industry and that of his father’s has acquired too much, in order to spare to others, who, or whose fathers, have not exercised equal industry and skill, is to violate arbitrarily the first principle of association—the guarantee to every one of a free exercise of his industry and the fruits acquired by it.

- I think myself that we have more machinery of government than is necessary, too many parasites living on the labor of the industrious. (Back then!)

- When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.

- I am not a friend to a very energetic government. It is always oppressive.
 
You're going to cite Thomas Jefferson as being the correct governmental philosophy? .
I was thinking more along the lines of:
I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.
Since you support those that are backing those entities 100% and denying Payroll tax cuts for the Middle Class for some odd reason.(when tax cuts build the economy according to Boner and Crew)
and
Believing that religion is a matter which lies solely between man and his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legislative powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their Legislature should "make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof," thus building a wall of separation between Church and State
Now this applies today with the Horrid shit going on in the HoR and the way they enjoy taking from the Laborer's. (UNIONS)
A wise and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor and bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government.
And One of my favorites..
Liberty is the great parent of science and of virtue
Other than Huntsman(using science to raise pole #'s). Tell me a GOP Canidate that is realistic on Science..... Excluding my Man Buddy Roemer!!!
 
You don't seem to realize the comment about:

A wise and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor and bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government.

This means the government shouldn't be stealing people's money. It has absolutely nothing to do with unions, which are simply mob-controlled, government-protected businesses.

How to you think TJ would feel about a government that confiscates nearly 50% of a person's income?
 
Your assumtion on me not understanding the quote is incorrect. You're interpretation is valid, but you're failing to realize there is more in that quote than one message. Government leaving man to persue for their own improvment. Hence letting them work to keep themselfs safe along with government. When government is fighting to stop restrictions on Safety in the workplace and prevent the workers from coming together to maintain a safer work environment is also valid. Striking down the rights of the worker.


Posted with my Droid EO Forum App
 
Your assumtion on me not understanding the quote is incorrect. You're interpretation is valid, but you're failing to realize there is more in that quote than one message. Government leaving man to persue for their own improvment. Hence letting them work to keep themselfs safe along with government. When government is fighting to stop restrictions on Safety in the workplace and prevent the workers from coming together to maintain a safer work environment is also valid. Striking down the rights of the worker.


Posted with my Droid EO Forum App

Ahhh... So we'll let people be free of regulation by regulating them.

Got it. That sure cleared everything up.
 
Perhaps Brown squared's online fodder is worthy of a RedSam comparison :whatever:

That's way premature. I can't help but sense he doesn't even believe most of his own rhetoric. I need to feel the sincerity in his posts.
 
Any word from that guy you know over there about what effect this will have on the booming Chinese middle class? :confused:
 
I know, I know...still trying to get in your calendar, sending your AA flowers, etc.

Got a new Touchpad I can show you some PDFs on if that sweetens the deal.
 
I still can't figure-out why a country full of people so poor they are swimming in their own filth have a "booming" domestic commercial airline market.

:confused:

Perhaps I should take my local monkey-boy stock-picker up on his perpetual lunch offer and allow him to enlighten me.
 
I still can't figure-out why a country full of people so poor they are swimming in their own filth have a "booming" domestic commercial airline market.

:confused:

Perhaps I should take my local monkey-boy stock-picker up on his perpetual lunch offer and allow him to enlighten me.

make sure he reimburses you for all that candy he ate while waiting in the lobby.
 
make sure he reimburses you for all that candy he ate while waiting in the lobby.

Maybe I can trade him for his super-hot stock pick of the week.

He told me that it's exponential growth! 1 becomes 2 becomes 4 becomes 8! The possibilities boggle the mind!
 
I bet he can get on the ground floor with the Forex guys who used to post on EF.

Is he ready to make the career leap forward?
 
I still can't figure-out why a country full of people so poor they are swimming in their own filth have a "booming" domestic commercial airline market.

:confused:

Methinks its also obvious you still cant figure out how to read (what we can only assume) are extremely conservative reports concerning China's poverty levels released by the People's Republic?

:confused:

But yeah, sushi dinners and such. They always trump facts. I forgot.

mitch, gimme your AA's email address. Once I go out to lunch with you, I'll obviously be qualified to run a car dealership.
 
A Mercedez Benz just drove in front of my place.

Ergo, everyone in Chicago owns a Mercedes Benz.

It's kind of fun being simple minded.
 
Maybe they are just cutting up all those Boeing an Airbus planes they've already bought and using them to build makeshift huts.
 
How many makeshift huts can you build out of $100B in airplanes anyway?
 
Have you ever been to the Boeing HQ here in Chicago?
 
If I had the right monkey-boy stock picker, could I be rich enough to cut-up an jet airplane and use it for a hut?

Suddenly I feel that I am somehow missing out on something way cool.
 
I take that as a no.

Therefore, how could you ever in a million years believe you could speak intelligently about anything related to Boeing, especially how many huts the scraps from a Boeing plane could create?

/thread
 
$100B buys around 600+ Boeing 767's. I bet they could build an entire town out of cut-up jet parts.

Damn, now I want to go visit the town.
 
Methinks its also obvious you still cant figure out how to read (what we can only assume) are extremely conservative reports concerning China's poverty levels released by the People's Republic?

:confused:

But yeah, sushi dinners and such. They always trump facts. I forgot.

mitch, gimme your AA's email address. Once I go out to lunch with you, I'll obviously be qualified to run a car dealership.

Lol
 
I'm not surprised at all... That's what happens when greedy unions dictate demands in the USA. In China, it's the opposite though, since they basically still have child slave labor, and that's also a bad extreme. But if they can build a jet plane of equal quality to Boeing, and sell it for 60% less, they're going to get the contract. You can buy one of my Hass avocados for $2 (retail at the store; that's not what I get for them), or you can buy one exactly the same as mine for $1 from Chile. I have to pay $20/hour for my workers when you add up all the employment taxes, social security, workmens comp, even though they are actually getting $10/hr, and in Chile, they probably are paying $2/hour if that, without any taxes and fees. Luckily for me, they limit the amount of produce imports from Central and South America, since it's not under NAFTA, so the price of the cheap avocados is held up a bit, but with planes, that's not going to happen. Boeing will be out of the airplane business as soon as China sends it's new plane here.

Charles
 
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