Business Day

New delays for Boeing 737 Max deliveries to China after Alaska incident, US newspaper reports

- Gokul Pisharody and Sophie Yu

Boeing faces a fresh delay in the resumption of deliveries of 737 Max jets to China after the midair blowout of a panel on an Alaska Airlines MAX 9 this month, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.

China Southern Airlines had been preparing to receive Max aircraft in January, but it plans to conduct additional safety inspection­s on the aircraft, the report reads, citing people familiar with the matter.

China’s aviation regulator also instructed the country’s airlines to conduct precaution­ary safety inspection­s on their Boeing 737 Max jets, the report added.

Chinese airlines do not have the Max 9 model in their fleet. The Max 8 jets they operate lack the panel involved in the Alaska Airlines incident.

Beijing is holding off from making further substantiv­e moves as it waits for more clarity from US investigat­ions into the accident, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing a person familiar with the matter.

Boeing declined to comment. China Southern Airlines and China’s aviation regulator did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

China suspended most orders and deliveries of Boeing aircraft in 2019 when the 737 Max was grounded worldwide after two fatal crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia.

A restart of Max deliveries would be a major breakthrou­gh for Boeing’s relationsh­ip with China, which has been affected by the Max crisis and US-China political tensions.

It would also be a financial win for Boeing, allowing it to collect payment for dozens of Chinese Max aircraft in its inventory.

The company last month made its first direct delivery of a 787 Dreamliner to China since 2019, a step seen as a possible prelude to the end of Beijing’s freeze on Max deliveries. Through November, it also handed more than eight 777 freighters to Chinese customers, according to Boeing data.

Boeing has been virtually frozen out of new orders from China since 2017 amid Sino-US trade tensions.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Just checking: A Boeing 737 Max. China Southern Airlines was due to receive some in January, but wants additional safety inspection­s, Wall Street Journal says.
/Reuters Just checking: A Boeing 737 Max. China Southern Airlines was due to receive some in January, but wants additional safety inspection­s, Wall Street Journal says.

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