That may be a reasonable estimate for a copy of or modified version of the Liaoning, but what if it is a brand new design?
I believe my argument (which is that using the time scale of Liaoning's refurbishment and refit to project the timescale of other future carrier projects is not logical), is still valid regardless for whether we are talking about 001A or 002.
If you want my exact estimate of how many years it may take for 001A and 002 to go from starting assembly to being launched to going to sea trials to entering service, that is something which is harder to put a specific number to, and I've also deliberately never committed myself to a date.
But I do definitely believe both 001A and 002 will be in the water/at sea by 2025 (which in my book means anything from going on sea trials to newly being commissioned to being fully operational).
And that doesn't account for if carrier fleet expansion is a high priority, which was a point of contention.
I'm not sure what you mean by this -- are you suggesting that two carriers needed to be both under construction in 2015 to fulfill your definition of carrier fleet expansion as a "high priority" for the Navy, and that say, if one began construction in 2015 and another began construction in 2016 or 2017 then it would not be "high priority"?
Just as some think two carriers are currently being built, it could easily have been the case a year ago.
The difference is that a year ago there were no credible rumours to suggest two carriers were under construction in 2015.
Even now, the rumours are only saying that 002 has begun initial stages of construction, it'll probably be a year or more until we start seeing 002 come together like we saw 001A last year.
I don't base my own position on these matters by plucking ideas out of a hat, on the contrary there are credible rumours that we try to critically assess and make projections out of, and last year there was no indications of any kind to suggest that 002 was beginning construction in any meaningful form.