Montreal Gazette

Boeing works to regain trust in Max

Global airline group takes cautious view while Boeing plans plane’s comeback

- JULIE JOHNSSON and ANURAG KOTOKY

CHICAGO Boeing Co. has begun carefully mapping out the steps to ease its 737 Max back into commercial service once regulators lift a global grounding for its best-selling jetliner.

The Chicago-based plane maker is planning the Max’s comeback with airlines in a series of meetings it’s been holding from Miami to Moscow, Boeing chief executive Dennis Muilenburg told the Bernstein Strategic Decisions Conference on Wednesday.

But the chief executive of a global airline associatio­n offered a cautious assessment of when airworthin­ess authoritie­s might give the Max a clean bill of health.

Flights aren’t expected to resume for at least 10 to 12 weeks, Alexandre de Juniac, chief executive of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n said on a call with reporters.

“We are preparing a meeting between regulators, the aircraft manufactur­er and the operators to make an assessment of the situation,” de Juniac said.

“But it is not in our hands. It’s in the hands of regulators.”

Muilenburg is navigating one of the worst crises in Boeing’s 103-year history after regulators grounded the 737 Max, the company’s largest source of profit, following two fatal accidents that killed 346 people.

The Boeing CEO described a “discipline­d” schedule that would start with Boeing teams helping to take the nearly 500 parked 737 jets out of storage. That total includes about 100 newly built Max that can’t be delivered until the grounding is lifted. They are stashed around the Seattle area and on a sprawling Boeing maintenanc­e base in San Antonio, Texas. The plane maker has two other sites it could tap if needed, Muilenburg said.

Boeing doesn’t plan to increase the tempo at its main 737 factory — nor reinstate its financial forecast — until it’s clear that its supply chain is healthy and moving in sync, Muilenburg said. Boeing suspended its outlook and share repurchase­s when regulators halted commercial flights in March.

The plane maker has been working to reassure travellers, pilots and regulators of its engineerin­g prowess and commitment to safety after an obscure software system, called MCAS, was linked to two crashes. The company also faces a criminal probe and civil inquires from the U.S. Congress and the Securities and Exchange Commission for its role in the accidents and close ties to federal regulators.

Boeing has largely completed work on a redesigned version, but has yet to submit the final paperwork to the Federal Aviation Administra­tion. Muilenburg said he was encouraged by a one-day summit last week with counterpar­ts at global airlines on the steps required to return the grounded Boeing jetliner to service, including the need for additional pilot training.

But at least one regulator has reaffirmed plans to do a separate, in-depth review.

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency plans to examine the 737 Max’s entire flight control system, including the plane’s displays, alerts and air-data systems, as well as the aircraft’s autopilot function, EASA director Patrick Ky wrote in a letter dated May 27 and seen by Bloomberg.

“The regulators aren’t on the same page,” De Juniac said. “Otherwise they’d have a similar time line, a similar set of measures.”

Airlines, regulators and Boeing will meet in five to seven weeks to try and set a common schedule for returning the Max to service and restoring trust in the plane, De Juniac said.

While the location has yet to be confirmed, IATA would like to see

We are preparing a meeting ... to make an assessment of the situation. ... It’s in the hands of regulators.

a single regulator making the call on airworthin­ess to avoid “useless complexity and additional costs,” he said.

IATA represents some 290 airlines, or more than 80 per cent of total air traffic. The group will hold its annual meeting in Seoul this weekend, in the biggest gathering of airline and plane-company executives since the Boeing tragedies in October and March.

The three U.S. operators of the Max have dropped the jet from their flight schedules through early August, in line with the time frame cited by de Juniac. Meanwhile, SpiceJet Ltd. said Boeing representa­tives told it the 737 Max should be back in the air by July, signalling a quicker return for the plane.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/AP FILES ?? Boeing has been working to reassure travellers, pilots and regulators of its engineerin­g prowess and commitment to safety after two fatal crashes involving its 737 Max jets grounded them worldwide.
JULIO CORTEZ/AP FILES Boeing has been working to reassure travellers, pilots and regulators of its engineerin­g prowess and commitment to safety after two fatal crashes involving its 737 Max jets grounded them worldwide.
 ?? JIM YOUNG/AP ?? Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg says the plane maker is following a “discipline­d” schedule to return the Max back in service.
JIM YOUNG/AP Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg says the plane maker is following a “discipline­d” schedule to return the Max back in service.

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