National Post (National Edition)

OTTAWA OKS RETURN OF BOEING MAX TO CANADIAN SKIES.

- JON VICTOR

MONTREAL • The Boeing Co. 737 MAX can return to Canadian airspace beginning Wednesday, Transport Canada says, concluding nearly two years of government review after the aircraft was involved in two deadly crashes that saw the planes grounded worldwide.

The planes will be permitted to fly as long as they meet conditions specified by Transport Canada in December, including allowing pilots to disable a faulty warning system that was found to be central to two deadly crashes in 2018 and 2019.

“Canadians and the airline industry can rest assured that Transport Canada has diligently addressed all safety issues prior to permitting this aircraft to return to service in Canadian airspace,” Transport Minister Omar Alghabra said.

The measures go beyond those announced by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion in November, which required Boeing to make changes to the computer systems inside the plane and required pilots to undergo training in flight simulators.

The announceme­nt Monday caps a recertific­ation process without precedent in the history of modern aviation.

The planes have been grounded since March 2019 following the crashes of a Lion Air flight near Jakarta on Oct. 29, 2018, and an Ethiopian Airlines flight on March 10, 2019, killing a total of 346 people. Investigat­ors determined that the cause of the crashes was a faulty computer system that pushed the plane's nose downward in flight and couldn't be overridden by pilots.

Canada had been one of the last countries to ground the MAX, banning it only after the European Union, U.K. and Australia had already done so.

An inquiry by the U.S. Congress found that missteps at Boeing and the FAA led to the computer malfunctio­n going undetected.

The investigat­ion found shortcomin­gs within both Boeing, which it said compromise­d safety to maximize profits, and the FAA, which it said exercised inadequate oversight over the aircraft's approval.

Other planes have been grounded after crashes, but flight suspension­s have never lasted as long as for the Max, which was being independen­tly re-certified by aviation authoritie­s such as the European Union Aviation Safety and the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China.

Prior to the Max crashes, civil aviation authoritie­s had typically gone along with the approvals of other countries, with limited independen­t oversight into the safety of the aircraft. But the scrutiny of the Max, including the role of the U.S. regulator, could usher in an era of more intensive reviews by regulators looking to avoid repeating their mistakes.

“Regulators such as Transport Canada have learned that they have to be much more careful, much more cautious and much less trusting,” said Joel Morin, an aviation consultant for To70.

The U.S. approved the Max's return to service in November, and the first commercial flights in the U.S. took off in December. European regulators have said they could formally approve the aircraft for flight as soon as this month.

The Chinese government, which was the first to ground the Max after the crashes, said in November that it had no set timetable for approving the jet, citing lingering safety concerns.

“The industry has full confidence in the aircraft as it returns to service,” said Mike McNaney, president and CEO of the National Airlines Council of Canada. “This is the most thoroughly reviewed aircraft in the history of commercial aviation, and I am looking forward to the opportunit­y to fly on the 737 Max in the near future.”

WestJet spokeswoma­n Lauren Stewart said the carrier's Max aircraft have been updated with the required modificati­ons, which have been approved by Transport Canada. She added that all pilot training will be completed prior to flight and that each aircraft will be flown on a validation flight before returning to service.

Separately, Air Canada said it would resume Boeing 737 Max commercial operations on Feb. 1, Reuters reported. The airline said the aircraft would gradually return to its North American route network.

The aircraft's approval in Canada will help struggling airlines, which rely on the smaller, fuel-efficient Max for long flights. But Canada's carriers now face a new challenge: convincing consumers to actually fly on the aircraft, a task made even more daunting by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Surveys have shown that people are still skittish about the Max. A survey of 1,757 flyers conducted by Barclays in May found that 21 per cent would never fly on a Max and 23 per cent planned to wait a year or more before doing so.

Restoring public confidence in the Max will be key as airlines look to capitalize on an anticipate­d recovery in demand this summer, when a COVID-19 vaccine is expected to become available for many Canadians. Air Canada, the country's largest carrier, has 24 Max aircraft in its fleet, while WestJet and Sunwing have 13 and four, respective­ly.

“That airplane is going to have to prove itself once again to the marketplac­e,” said John Gradek, a lecturer at McGill University and the head of its Global Aviation Leadership Program. “There's going to have to be a very concerted effort on the part of the aviation industry, both Boeing as well as the operators, to try to get people to feel confident that it's OK to fly on the 737 Max.”

AIRPLANE IS GOING TO HAVE TO PROVE ITSELF ONCE AGAIN.

 ?? GAVIN YOUNG / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? A WestJet Boeing 737 Max taxis back to the WestJet hangars on Thursday after a training flight in Calgary.
GAVIN YOUNG / POSTMEDIA NEWS A WestJet Boeing 737 Max taxis back to the WestJet hangars on Thursday after a training flight in Calgary.

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