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FAA appoves Boeing 787 Dreamliner delivery after inspection­s

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WASHINGTON: The United States government says it has approved the first Boeing 787 Dreamliner for delivery since 2021, clearing the way for American Airlines to take possession, people briefed on the matter say.

American Airlines said it expects to receive its first Boeing 787 delivery of the year as early as today and that the plane will enter commercial service in the coming weeks.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) said it expected Boeing to resume deliveries of its 787 in coming days after the manufactur­er made inspection and retrofit changes needed to meet certificat­ion standards.

Boeing halted deliveries in May 2021 after the FAA raised concerns about its proposed inspection method. In September 2020, the FAA said it was investigat­ing manufactur­ing flaws in some 787 jetliners.

American Airlines said on a July earnings call, it expects to receive nine 787s this year, including two in early August. It has 42 on order, excluding the plane it expects to receive this week.

Boeing said it continues “to work transparen­tly with the FAA and our customers towards resuming 787 deliveries.”

Last month, the FAA approved Boeing’s plan for specific inspection­s to verify the airplane meets requiremen­ts and that all retrofit work has been completed. Boeing has about 120 787s awaiting delivery.

The FAA said it “will inspect each aircraft before an airworthin­ess certificat­e is issued and cleared for delivery.”

Typically the FAA delegates airplane ticketing authority to the manufactur­er but in some instances like the 737 Max it has retained responsibi­lity for approving each new airplane.

In the aftermath of two fatal 737 Max crashes in 2018 and 2019, the FAA pledged to more closely scrutinise Boeing and delegate fewer responsibi­lities to Boeing for aircraft certificat­ion.

Acting FAA administra­tor Billy Nolen met with FAA safety inspectors in South Carolina last week as the agency mulled whether to allow Boeing to resume 787 deliveries.

Before Boeing suspended production, the FAA had issued two airworthin­ess directives to address production issues for in-service airplanes. It identified a new issue in July 2021.

The planemaker had resumed deliveries in March 2021 after a five-month hiatus before halting them again. The FAA said earlier it wanted Boeing to ensure it “has a robust plan for the re-work that it must perform on a large volume of new 787s in storage” and that “Boeing’s delivery processes are stable.”

In January, Boeing disclosed a Us$3.5bil (Rm15.6bil) charge due to 787 delivery delays and customer concession­s, and another Us$1bil (Rm4.46bil) in abnormal production costs stemming from production flaws and related repairs and inspection­s.

 ?? — AFP ?? Operationa­l again: A Boeing 787 Dreamliner ready for takeoff. US federal regulators say they are satisfied with changes the aircraft manufactur­er has made in the production of its passenger jet, clearing the way for the company to resume deliveries this week.
— AFP Operationa­l again: A Boeing 787 Dreamliner ready for takeoff. US federal regulators say they are satisfied with changes the aircraft manufactur­er has made in the production of its passenger jet, clearing the way for the company to resume deliveries this week.

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