Bangkok Post

Boeing cuts jet output as Covid-19 hammers sales

- ANKIT AJMERA ERIC M. JOHNSON

Boeing Co slashed production of its biggest twin-engined jets, delayed its new 777X by up to a year and began sunsetting the iconic 747 as it posted a biggerthan-expected quarterly loss dominated by the Covid pandemic on Wednesday.

The cuts mark the industry’s latest effort to tackle a crisis that has decimated demand for air travel, with oversuppli­ed wide-body models like the 787 Dreamliner and 777 plunging deeper into an existing downturn.

Boeing also remains exposed to tensions between the United States and China, which has shelved plans to buy big US jets.

“Our industry and our company are weathering challenges like none we have ever experience­d in our lifetimes,” chief executive Dave Calhoun told analysts.

Boeing said it would cut 787 output to six a month in 2021 — down from a previous goal of seven and the third such cut since a year ago when output touched a record 14 a month.

It also plans to cut combined output of the 777 mini-jumbo and its new 777X sister model to two a month in 2021 from a previous goal of three, while delaying the 777X entry to service by a year to 2022, confirming a Reuters report.

Boeing reported a $2.4 billion loss in the second quarter as revenues plunged 25% to $11.8 billion.

The commercial airplanes unit was hit by $468 million in severance expenses related to plans to cut 19,000 jobs of its roughly 160,000 workforce and Boeing warned deeper cuts were possible.

“We’ll have to further assess the size of our workforce,” Calhoun told employees.

The financial impact of the health crisis has compounded the safety grounding of Boeing’s narrow-body 737 MAX 16 months ago.

Calhoun told analysts MAX deliveries would resume in the fourth quarter, a fresh delay of several weeks that raises the prospect that its US return to service could slip into 2021.

Boeing also slowed plans to lift battered MAX production, by pushing its target of 31 jets a month into 2022 from 2021.

“We still see a path to positive cash flow in 2021,” CFO Greg Smith added, noting it would take a year after MAX deliveries begin to clear a backlog of around 450 parked jets.

In a further shake-up, Calhoun said Boeing was looking at whether to consolidat­e 787 production in one location as it cuts output.

It splits production on the 787

Dreamliner between Everett, Washington, and North Charleston, South Carolina.

That raises questions over the future of the Everett hub because the largest 787-10 can only be built in South Carolina.

Smith said Boeing would be able to

return to a rate of 10-11 787s monthly at some point.

Calhoun said it was too early to predict the outcome of the study, part of a wider industrial reassessme­nt.

The wide-body production cuts reflect fears that it could take until 2023 for air traffic to return to normal levels.

Long-range routes — served by bigger jets like Boeing 787 and Airbus A350 — have been hit harder than short hops.

Industry sources said Boeing’s production cuts would put pressure on Airbus SE to further cut its own widebody production.

Boeing also confirmed the last of its legendary 747 would roll out of the factory in 2022.

The easily spotted hump-topped jumbo had democratis­ed global air travel in the 1970s and was a favourite of presidents and potentates, before it fell behind modern twin-jets.

 ?? AFP ?? In this file photo, in-production Boeing 747 aircraft for Cathay Pacific sit on the tarmac at Boeing Co’s production facilities at Paine Field in Washington. The Boeing 747 has become the plane of American presidents and mass tourism, but it is about to bow out almost 50 years after its first flight.
AFP In this file photo, in-production Boeing 747 aircraft for Cathay Pacific sit on the tarmac at Boeing Co’s production facilities at Paine Field in Washington. The Boeing 747 has become the plane of American presidents and mass tourism, but it is about to bow out almost 50 years after its first flight.

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