The Commercial Appeal

Boeing doesn’t expect Max jet soon

- David Koenig ASSOCIATED PRESS

Boeing said Tuesday that it doesn’t expect federal regulators to approve its changes to the grounded 737 Max until this summer, several months longer than the company was saying just a few weeks ago.

That timetable – the latest of several delays in the plane’s approval process – will create more headaches for airlines by pushing the Max’s return further into the peak summer travel season or possibly beyond it.

Boeing shares fell nearly 6% at one point, to a 52-week low, and closed down 3.4%.

The company said that regulators will decide when the Max flies again but that it periodical­ly gives airlines and suppliers its best estimate of when that will happen.

“This updated estimate is informed by our experience to date with the certification process,” Boeing said in a statement. “It is subject to our ongoing attempts to address known schedule risks and further developmen­ts that may arise in connection with the certifica

tion process. It also accounts for the rigorous scrutiny that regulatory authoritie­s are rightly applying at every step of their review” of the plane’s flight controls and pilot-training requiremen­ts.

The latest timetable is based on work remaining to be done before the Federal Aviation Administra­tion will allow the Max back in the sky, including work on flight-control computers, according to two people familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss details that Boeing did not provide.

The FAA said in a statement that it is conducting “a thorough, deliberate process” to make sure that Boeing’s changes to the Max meet certification standards.

The agency said, as it has for months, that it has no timetable for completing its review.

The three U.S. airlines that own Maxes – Southwest, American and United – have scrubbed the plane from their schedules until early June. It is possible, however, that they won’t use the planes until much later, possibly after the busy summer travel season is over.

Even after the FAA certifies Boeing’s work, airlines will need several more weeks to prepare their grounded planes and train pilots.

After long insisting that training could be done quickly on tablets, Boeing recently reversed course and recommende­d that pilots go through sessions on flight simulators before operating the plane, adding more time to airline preparatio­ns.

Shortly after the first Max crash in October 2018 in Indonesia, Boeing began updating software that investigat­ors say was triggered by a faulty sensor and pushed the plane’s nose down. Then in March 2019, another Max crashed in Ethiopia. In all, 346 people died.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/AP ?? Southwest, American and United airlines have scrubbed the Boeing 737 Max from their schedules until early June.
ELAINE THOMPSON/AP Southwest, American and United airlines have scrubbed the Boeing 737 Max from their schedules until early June.

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