Gulf Today

Boeing to pay $6.6 million fine to US regulators

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WASHINGTON/PARIS: Boeing Co will pay $6.6 million to US regulators as part of a setlement over quality and safety-oversight lapses going back years, a setback that comes as Boeing wrestles with repairs to flawed 787 Dreamliner jets that could dwarf the cost of the federal penalty.

Boeing is beginning painstakin­g repairs and forensic inspection­s to fix structural integrity flaws embedded deep inside at least 88 parked 787s built over the last year or so, a third industry source said.

The inspection­s and retrofits could take up to a month per plane and are likely to cost hundreds of millions - if not billions - of dollars, though it depends on the number of planes and defects involved, the person said.

Boeing shares extended losses in the final hour of trading, closing down 5.6%, ater Reuters first reported the setlement with the Federal Aviation Administra­tion over the planemaker’s failure to comply with a 2015 safety agreement.

The penalties include $5.4 million for not complying with the agreement in which Boeing pledged to change its internal processes to improve and prioritize regulatory compliance and $1.21 million to setle two pending FAA enforcemen­t cases. “The FAA is holding Boeing accountabl­e by imposing additional penalties,” FAA Administra­tor Steve Dickson said in a statement.

Boeing paid $12 million in 2015 as part of the setlement.

The planemaker is strengthen­ing processes and operations “to ensure we hold ourselves accountabl­e to the highest standards of safety and quality,” a spokesman said by email, adding that setlement “fairly resolves previously­announced civil penalty actions while accounting for ongoing safety, quality and compliance process improvemen­ts.”

Boeing engineers are working to determine the scope of inspection­s, including whether jets can be used as-is without a threat to safety, two people said. Boeing has not told airlines how many jets are impacted, another person said.

The FAA has been investigat­ing instances of oversight lapses, debris let inside finished aircrat, and managers puting pressure on employees handling safety checks for the FAA, people familiar with the proceeding­s said.

The FAA has also wrapped into a single investigat­ion three separate 787 defects arising over the last year that have triggered the invasive inspection­s, the people said. Boeing told the FAA in August 2020 about the latest flaw, involving structural wrinkling in the interior fuselage skin where carbon-composite barrels that form the plane’s lightweigh­t body are melded together.

The defect went unnoticed for months or longer because computeriz­ed safeguards that crunch data looking for quality flaws had not been programmed to look for the gaps, a third industry source said.

The 787 production problems have halted deliveries of the jet since the end of October, locking up a source of desperatel­y needed cash for Boeing.

The fuel-efficient 787 has been a huge success with airlines, which have ordered 1,882 of the advanced twin-aisle jet worth nearly $150 billion (74.7 billion pounds) at list prices.

But the advanced production process and sprawling global supply chain caused problems over the years.

As of February, Boeing had fixed the 787 production process causing the wrinkling defect, according to two people familiar with the mater.

However, planes rolled off the assembly line with the flaw for more than a year, at least, continuing even ater the flaw was discovered in August 2020.

“It’s difficult to see a definitive fix that is agreeable by the aviation authoritie­s and all going forward,” Boeing customer Air Lease Corp’s CEO John Plueger told analysts on an earnings call Feb 22. “I don’t think that we’re there yet.”

AIRBUS ENGINES: Airbus is working on hybrid-electric propulsion among the options for reducing jetliner emissions, the European planemaker said on Friday.

It disclosed the initiative in a document projecting more than a million tonnes of equivalent CO2 emissions over the life of each currentgen­eration jet, as it became the first planemaker to report so-called “Scope 3” emissions.

Until now, Airbus has mainly publicised hydrogen as the preferred energy source for future airplanes, pledging to introduce the first hydrogen-powered commercial plane in 2035.

But on Friday it said it was also working on hybrid-electric alternativ­es.

“The company’s work in electric flight has laid the groundwork for our future concept of zero-emission commercial aircrat,” Airbus said, adding it is “now exploring a variety of hybridelec­tric and hydrogen technology options”.

Although experts say hydrogen could power relatively small planes to start with and galvanise green investment­s, it poses challenges because of its volume and the need for a new infrastruc­ture. Rival Boeing has downplayed the idea.

Several industry sources say the leading option for a future replacemen­t to the bestsellin­g 150-seat A320, likely to enter service in the 2030s, involves hybrid-electric power, with hydrogen only likely to power such large airplanes later.

Engine makers are actively exploring openrotor engines with visible blades using a mixture of traditiona­l turbines and electric propulsion for future replacemen­ts to the Airbus A320 and Boeing 737, industry officials told Reuters.

Asked to comment on its hybrid-electric plans, an Airbus spokesman said: “Only a combinatio­n of technologi­es, including hydrogen, will help us aim for zero emission.”

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