Antelope Valley Press

Boeing wins a new 737 MAX order

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Ryanair Holdings PLC on Thursday said it has agreed to buy 75 of Boeing Co.’s 737 MAX jets, a boost for the troubled plane maker following the aircraft’s prolonged grounding.

The European budget airline’s deal is worth more than $7 billion at current prices.

Ryanair chose to exercise the option it had to buy additional aircraft on top of 135 it had previously agreed to buy from Boeing.

Boeing has lost hundreds of MAX orders amid a nearly twoyear grounding following two fatal crashes of the jet — and is now struggling amid a pandemic that has sapped demand for air travel.

The US last month approved the MAX passenger flights again, issuing a set of safety directives and notices to airlines globally, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Michael O’Leary, the airline’s chief executive, said it would accelerate its delivery schedule of the jets, saying the order would help the airline’s growth as travel demand returns.

“We’re proud to buy them,” he said. “We’re proud to fly them.”

The March 2019 grounding — after two crashes took 346 lives — lasted nearly two years until US regulators lifted it on Nov. 18.

Foreign regulators are expected to lift their MAX flight bans in coming months.

Boeing is expected to resume MAX deliveries this month. United Airlines Holdings Inc. has been expected to be the first customer to receive a new MAX since the American regulator ended the US grounding, people familiar with the matter said.

Boeing last received new MAX orders in August — two from Poland’s Enter Air and three from an unidentifi­ed customer, the only previous sales this year.

The manufactur­er hasn’t won a large MAX deal since June 2019, when British Airways’ parent company announced it had signed a letter of intent to buy up to 200 of the planes. The deal hasn’t translated into a firm order formally reported by Boeing.

While the precise terms of Ryanair’s deal weren’t disclosed, the airline has a reputation for snatching up cheap aircraft while the aviation industry is in a downturn, including placing an order for 100 of the older generation 737 in the months following the 9/11 attacks in the US.

O’Leary has repeatedly expressed confidence in the MAX after its grounding, but said he would wait until the plane had been re-certified by regulators before placing an order for additional planes.

Before the pandemic and government lock-down hobbled global air travel, the MAX’s flight ban had hurt Ryanair’s profit and prompted the carrier to lay off employees and close bases.

Ryanair first signed a deal with Boeing for the aircraft in 2014, when it agreed to purchase 100 variants of the MAX 8 jets, known as the MAX 2, which carry 200 passengers.

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