Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Spin Control

Mitsubishi coming to Moses Lake

OLYMPIA — Mitsubishi Aircraft Corp. will begin testing its new airliner in Moses Lake next fall, bringing about 100 jobs to that Central Washington community, Gov. Jay Inslee said. . . 

To read the rest of this item, or to comment, click here to continue inside the blog.

The Japanese aerospace company said it signed a contract to begin testing its new regional airplane, the MRJ, with a company based at the Grant County International Airport.

The MJR, for Mitsubishi Regional Jet, is a 70-90 seat aircraft, which will be flight tested in Japan as well as Moses Lake. The company said today it signed a letter of intent with Aerospace Testing Engineering & Certification, or AeroTEC, to begin Moses Lake testing in 2015.

Mitsubishi said it selected Grant County International, the old home of Larson Air Force Base, due to a large aerospace cluster in the state and airport features which include long runways, flexibility for takeoffs and landings because there are no regular transport services, and high chances of fair weather.

The company made the announcement at the Farnborough Air Show in England. 

Inslee, who is in Farnborough to push Washington’s aerospace industry, proclaimed Monday "a good day for aerospace jobs in Washington." Mitsubishi will be bringing about 60 engineers and other personnel to the Moses Lake facility for at least three to five years, he said. AeroTEC will have about 20 engineers plus ancillary staff on site after constructing a new hangar with special electrical equipment. 

The MRJ is smaller than any of the jets produced by Boeing so it doesn't really compete with the state's largest aerospace manufacturer, he added.

“It also further solidifies the long-standing economic and cultural relationship Washington has enjoyed with the nation of Japan," he said. 

For many years, JAL, one of Japan’s major carriers, trained its crews on takeoffs and landings in Boeing jetliners at the Grant County airport, a practice that sometimes had travelers crossing the state on Interstate 90 wondering why a 747 was circling low over Moses Lake.



Jim Camden
Jim Camden joined The Spokesman-Review in 1981 and retired in 2021. He is currently the political and state government correspondent covering Washington state.

Follow Jim online: