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China launches EM catapults-equipped


3rd aircraft carrier in Shanghai
The Fujian is equipped with electromagnetic catapults
By GT staff reportersPublished: Jun 17, 2022 12:01 PM Updated: Jun 17, 2022 10:11 PM
   

China launches the country's third aircraft carrier in Shanghai on June 17, 2022. Photo: Xinhua
 
China on Friday launched the country's third aircraft carrier and also its second
domestically developed one in Shanghai, a move experts said is a milestone for the
vessel's construction and future commissioning.

Having a displacement of more than 80,000 tons, the carrier, named Fujian, is the
country's first one equipped with electromagnetic catapults and arresting devices.

As a key landmark in the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) Navy's pursuit to
become a blue-water navy, the third carrier is larger, more powerful and more
advanced than the previous two, making it the first Chinese aircraft carrier to come
close to rival its US counterparts thanks to technologies it uses like catapults, analysts
said.

A launch and naming ceremony was held in the Jiangnan Shipyard, a Shanghai-based
subsidiary of China State Shipbuilding Corporation Limited, at about 11 am, when the
naming certificate of the vessel was given to the top officer to receive the delivery of
the aircraft carrier.

Officials then cut the ribbon marking the launch of the third aircraft carrier, after
which the vessel left the dock, concluding the ceremony.

Xu Qiliang, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China


Central Committee and vice-chairman of the Central Military Commission, attended
the ceremony.

According to the approval of the Central Military Commission, China's third aircraft
carrier is named the Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy Ship Fujian and given
the hull number 18.

Graphic: GT
 
The Fujian is China's first fully domestically developed and constructed aircraft
carrier with catapults. It has a flat, straight flight deck equipped with electromagnetic
catapults and arresting devices, and has a full displacement of more than 80,000 tons.

Fujian is also the name of the eastern coastal province facing the island of Taiwan,
leading to speculations from netizens that the carrier could play an important role in
safeguarding China's sovereignty, territorial integrity and development interests in the
Taiwan question.
After the launch, the carrier will start mooring trials and sea trials.

The launch is a milestone for ship construction, as it indicates that the main structure
of the vessel is complete, Song Zhongping, a Chinese military expert and TV
commentator, told the Global Times.

After the launch, outfitting work will be finished, fully furbishing the ship with
equipment like fuel pipes, gas pipes, electric devices and weapons systems, Song said.
Since this is China's first large aircraft carrier equipped with catapults, the outfitting
works might take longer than usual to make sure everything is done properly, he said.

A number of sea trials will be carried out after the outfitting work is complete, and the
aircraft carrier will hopefully be delivered to the PLA Navy in two to three years from
now, Song said.

The evolution of Chinese aircraft carriers Graphic: Feng Qingyin/GT

Capability boost

By comparison, China's current two aircraft carriers, the Liaoning and the Shandong,


both have a displacement of about 60,000 tons and use ski-jump ramps to assist
aircraft launch.

Being larger means the Fujian can carry more aircraft. Using catapults to replace the
ski-jump ramp leads to a significant increase in aircraft sortie rate, allows aircraft to
take off carrying more fuel and munitions, and enables heavier aircraft like early
warning aircraft and cargo planes to operate on the carrier. Electromagnetic catapults
are superior to their steam counterparts because they are lighter, use less resources,
recharge faster and can change power output to match the launch needs of different
types of aircraft, observers said.

Media reports speculate that the Fujian could eventually get an improved version of


the J-15 heavy fighter jet compatible with catapult launch, an electronic warfare
variant of the J-15, a next-generation stealth fighter jet reportedly to be called the J-
35, a fixed-wing early warning aircraft dubbed the KJ-600, and armed reconnaissance
drones.

The Fujian will become a key landmark in the PLA Navy's pursuit to become a blue-
water navy as well as China's shipbuilding and defense industries, as it is larger, more
powerful and more advanced than the PLA Navy's previous two carriers, Song said.

US' most advanced aircraft carrier, the Gerald R. Ford-class, has a displacement of
about 100,000 tons, is equipped with four electromagnetic catapults and uses nuclear
power.

This means the Fujian, which is widely believed to use conventional power, is still a
level behind the Ford-class, but it has become the first Chinese aircraft carrier to come
close to rival its US counterpart, analysts said. Only the US and China have the
capability to develop electromagnetic catapult.

The comprehensive combat capability of an aircraft carrier should also be viewed in


an aircraft carrier group with escort vessels and in the whole combat system supported
by other elements, plus the strategy on how the aircraft carrier should be used. In this
case, Chinese escort vessels like the Type 055 large destroyer are very powerful and
are superior to their US counterparts, a Beijing-based military expert who requested
anonymity told the Global Times.

It is also important to understand that China and the US use aircraft carriers
differently. China uses aircraft carriers to safeguard its national sovereignty, security
and development interests and protect regional stability and world peace, instead of
using them as tools to achieve world hegemony like the US, the expert said.
The strategy of the PLA Navy aims at coastal defense and far sea escort, and this
means the third aircraft carrier will excel at combat missions on the doorsteps of
China including the Taiwan Straits and the South China Sea even facing possible
aggressions by US carriers, and it can also serve its purpose in escort missions far
away from China, experts said.

Generally speaking, the Fujian is China's most advanced aircraft carrier, only second
to the US around the world, and its launch will invigorate China's future aircraft
carrier program, observers said.
 

The picture shows aircraft carrier Shandong berths at a naval port in Sanya. China's first domestically-made aircraft
carrier Shandong (Hull 17) was officially commissioned to the PLA Navy at a military port in Sanya, South China's
Hainan Province, on the afternoon of December 17, 2019, making China one of the few countries in the world that
have multiple carriers. Photo: China Military
 
Putting capabilities aside, the increase in the number of China's aircraft carriers is also
of significance.

Based on the general pattern of aircraft carrier operation, a country needs to have a
certain number of aircraft carriers to ensure they can be effectively deployed, Li Jie, a
Chinese naval expert, told the Global Times.
In order to maintain air superiority and control of the sea in a strategic region, three
aircraft carriers are needed, Li said, noting that one will be put on combat alert, one on
training missions, and the other will be put under maintenance.

In terms of location, China's second carrier, the Shandong, is based in Sanya, South


China's Hainan Province near the South China Sea, while the Liaoning, the first
carrier, is based in Qingdao, East China's Shandong Province near the East China Sea,
Yellow Sea and Bohai Sea. The homeport of the newly launched Fujian is not yet
announced.

Senior Captain Liu Wensheng, spokesperson of the PLA Navy, said on Friday that the
Navy will choose the deployment location of the Fujian based on the need to
safeguard national sovereignty, security and development interests, as well as the
characteristics of carrier operations and logistics support conditions of the port.

According to regulations governing the naming of PLA Navy vessels, aircraft carriers
are usually named after provincial administrative units, and that is why the third
aircraft carrier is named after East China's Fujian Province, Liu said.

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