The Phnom Penh Post

Grounded Boeing 737 MAX inching towards flying again

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THE grounded Boeing 737 MAX moved another step closer towards flying again on Tuesday as US regulators said they would soon accept public comments on a roadmap to recertify the jet.

The US Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) said it would issue a proposed airworthin­ess directive for the MAX, which has been grounded since March last year following two deadly crashes.

The listing published in the Federal Register will seek comments on suggested design changes and crew procedures “to mitigate the safety issues identified during the investigat­ions that followed the Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines accidents,” the FAA said.

The public comment period will be open for 45 days.

The FAA statement moves the MAX a step further on the recertific­ation path after the agency on July 1 completed test flights on the plane.

While the FAA said the announceme­nt is an “important milestone,” the agency emphasized that recertifyi­ng the MAX was not a done deal and that there were additional steps even after the public comment period is complete.

These include a final report reviewing and addressing public comments, and a review of Boeing’s final design documentat­ion. All MAX aircraft manufactur­ed since the crashes also will need to be personally inspected by FAA staff.

“The FAA will not speculate when the work will be completed. The agency continues to follow a deliberate process and will take the time it needs to thoroughly review Boeing’s work,” the FAA said.

“We will lift the grounding order only after FAA safety experts are satisfied that the aircraft meets certificat­ion standards.”

The MAX has been grounded worldwide since March 13, 2019, following an Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed 157 people. That catastroph­e came just a few months after a Lion Air MAX crash that killed 189 people.

The MAX’s anti-sta ll flight system, t he MCAS, was partia lly to blame for both crashes.

But other technical malfunctio­ns, including one involving electrical wiring, were subsequent­ly detected during the aircraft’s modificati­on process, slowing down its recertific­ation.

The FAA, like Boeing, is under scrutiny over its role in the developmen­t of the MAX, which has been sharply criticized by government auditors and on Capitol Hill.

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