China's home-grown AG600, the world's largest amphibious
aircraft in production, took to the skies on Sunday for its maiden
flight.
The plane, codenamed “Kunlong” according to state news agency Xinhua, took off from the southern city of Zhuhai and landed after roughly an hour-long flight.
With
a wingspan of 38.8 metres (127 feet) and powered by four turboprop
engines, the aircraft is capable of carrying 50 people and can stay
airborne for 12 hours.
“Its successful maiden flight
makes China among the world's few countries capable of developing a
large amphibious aircraft,” chief designer Huang Lingcai told Xinhua.
The
amphibious aircraft has military applications but will be used for
firefighting and marine rescue, with at least 17 orders placed so far
with state-owned manufacturer Aviation Industry Corp of China, state
media reported.
While it is around the size of a Boeing
737, the AG600 is considerably smaller than billionaire Howard Hughes'
flying boat, better known as the Spruce Goose, which had a wingspan of
97 metres and a length of 67 metres but only made one brief flight, in
1947.
The AG600's flight capabilities put all of China's island-building projects in the South China Sea well within range.
“Its
4,500-km operational range and ability to land and take off from water
makes it well-suited for deployment over China's artificial islands,”
said James Char, a military analyst at Singapore's Nanyang Technological
University.
The aircraft can fly to the southernmost
edge of China's territorial claims ─ the James Shoal ─ in just four
hours from the southern city of Sanya, state-owned Global Times
reported.
The shoal is also claimed by Taiwan and Malaysia, and is currently administered by Malaysia.
The
collection of submerged rocks lies roughly 80 kilometres from
Malaysia's coastline and about 1,800 kilometres from the Chinese
mainland.
“The plane's capacity and maneuverability
makes it ideal for transporting materiel to those maritime features that
are too structurally fragile to support runways,” Char said.
Beijing's
buildup in the South China Sea, through which some $5 trillion in
annual trade passes, is hotly contested by other nations.
The
Philippines for many years was one of the region's strongest opponents
of Chinese expansionism, and brought a complaint to a United
Nations-backed tribunal.
The panel ruled last year that
China's territorial claims in the sea were without legal basis, but the
Philippines has backed away from the dispute under its new president
Rodrigo Duterte.
The launch of the new amphibious aircraft further strengthens China's rapidly modernising military.
Earlier
this year, it launched its first domestically built aircraft carrier,
the Type 001A. This complemented the Liaoning, a second-hand Soviet
carrier commissioned in 2012 after extensive refits.
China's
military expenditure in 2016 was an estimated $215bn, according to the
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, putting it in first
place in Asia, well ahead of India ($56 billion), Japan ($46 billion)
and South Korea ($37bn).