Taiwan and the Czech Republic have signed an agreement to promote bilateral aviation ties, Taiwan's Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA) said yesterday.
Under the Air Worthiness Arrangement, the CAA and its Czech Republic counterpart will authorize each other to certify certain components for the nine to 10 seat Ae-270 passenger airplanes the two countries jointly develop, a CAA official told AFP.
The Ae-270 is scheduled to get the all-clear by the Federal Aviation Administration of the US late next year.
The plane is a 50-50 joint venture, called Ibis Aerospace, between the two countries.
Taiwan's state-owned Aero Industrial Development Corp (
"Such an arrangement shows Taiwan's capability in help maintaining aviation safety is recognized," the CAA official said.
The agreement could be expanded to cover other models of aircraft, the official said, adding a similar arrangement had been made with France.
He also denied a newspaper report here that the agreement involved military secrets.
"The arrangement is a pure civil aviation cooperation," he said.
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