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How did the Chinese navy train talent for the Fujian aircraft carrier?

The process of training operators for the electromagnetic launch catapult on the newly commissioned warship may have started back in 2017

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President Xi Jinping met Fujian crew members at last week’s commissioning ceremony. Photo: Xinhua
Phoebe Zhangin ShenzhenandSylvie Zhuangin Beijing
China may have started nurturing the technical knowledge needed to operate the electromagnetic launch catapult on its newly commissioned carrier the Fujian at least eight years ago, according to open records that offer a glimpse into the long-term planning involved in military universities.
Footage of Wednesday’s commissioning ceremony from state broadcaster CCTV showed President Xi Jinping speaking to a landing signals officer. When he asked her what she studied, she replied “electromagnetic catapults”.

Although there is no record of any courses with that exact name, in 2017 China Military Online, an official publication of the People’s Liberation Army, advertised for recruits to sign up for a new course in “electromagnetic launch engineering” at the Navy University of Engineering.

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Some of its main elements include electrical machinery, power electronics, the principles of automatic control and the principles of electromagnetic launches.

After the advertisement appeared, state-run Global Times said it meant the technology was mature and showed China placed great emphasis on it, one of a number of pieces covering the topic that were published at the time.

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The Fujian’s catapults mark a technological leap for the Chinese navy. Its two previous carriers, the Liaoning and Shandong, based on Soviet-era technology, have ski-jump decks.

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