The Asian Age

India set to clear Boeing 737 Max

- ANURAG KOTOKY AUG. 12

India is set to allow Boeing Co's 737 Max jets to resume flights in the country within days, according to a person familiar with the matter, clearing one of the last remaining hurdles for the US planemaker as it seeks to get the model flying again worldwide.

The South Asian nation has been satisfied with the plane's performanc­e since it was un-grounded in the US, Europe and a number of other nations, and Boeing has met India's own requiremen­ts, which included setting up a Max simulator there, the person said, asking not to be identified because the matter is confidenti­al.

Rajeev Jain, a spokesman for India's aviation ministry, said a decision on un-grounding the Max is awaited. A representa­tive for Boeing said the company continues to work with global regulators to safely return the Max to service worldwide, adding that more than 170 out of 195 global regulators have opened their airspace for the model.

Clearance in India will be a coup for Boeing, ending the plane's more than two-year grounding in a country where Airbus SE's A320-family of aircraft dominate the skies. It would leave China as the last major hurdle for

Boeing, given almost all other major aviation markets have allowed the jet to fly again following extensive fixes. Beijing moved first to ground the Max in 2019 after two deadly crashes, triggering a cascade of orders from aviation authoritie­s around the world. Boeing conducted a test flight for regulators in China on Wednesday, the first sign of a potential thawing.

Akasa, a new Indian airline backed by billionair­e investor Rakesh Jhunjhunwa­la, has also approached authoritie­s about its desire to operate 737 Max jets, the person said. Boeing is in advanced discussion­s with Akasa to sell it as many as 80 Max planes, and is likely to offer steeper-than-usual discounts, Bloomberg reported earlier.

SpiceJet Ltd, the only Indian carrier that has 737 Max jets on order and is currently in discussion­s with the planemaker on a compensati­on package, hasn't asked Indian authoritie­s to lift the flight ban, the person said.

Representa­tives for SpiceJet and Jhujhunwal­a didn't immediatel­y respond to requests for comments.

In April, India allowed Max jets registered in other nations to enter Indian airspace if the flight is permitted by the registerin­g authority of that country. That ruling came almost two years after two crashes within five months killed 346 people in Indonesia and Ethiopia, leading to the worldwide grounding.

India may allow imported and brand-new Max jets to fly immediatel­y, but grounded planes will need about a month to become airworthy again, the person said.

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