Oman Daily Observer

Boeing 737 output drops on quality checks, more FAA audits: sources

- Reuters

BOEING 737 MAX jetliner production has fallen sharply in recent weeks as US regulators step up factory checks and workers slow the assembly line outside Seattle to complete outstandin­g work, industry sources told Reuters.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) has imposed a cap of 38 jets a month following a blowout on a 737 MAX in January, blamed on an assembly error. But the monthly output rate is fluctuatin­g well below this level and in late March fell as low as single digits, they said. Boeing referred to comments by CFO Brian West who said last month it was taking comprehens­ive steps to strengthen quality and build confidence — including reducing the amount of so-called travelled or pending work — as the FAA increases audits.

West told a Bank of America event that the FAA was “deeply involved and undertakin­g a tougher audit than anything we have ever been through before”.

Boeing also said it has made efforts to reduce the amount of socalled “travelled work” — or planes moving down the line with jobs still needing to be fixed from earlier work stations. The effect is to slow overall production and, in turn, deliveries. Boeing has faced increased scrutiny following the loss of a door plug on an Alaska Airlines jetliner in January. Shares in the planemaker ended down 1.7 per cent. Planemaker­s get paid for their jets upon delivery, but the underlying production rate dictates the pulse of an industrial system feeding thousands of aerospace suppliers worldwide.

Boeing’s production slowdown is also expected to ripple through the airline industry, with carriers shaving flights from their schedule or extending existing jet leases to meet demand.

Traditiona­lly, production and deliveries went hand in hand, but the grounding of the MAX in 2019 and 2020 and disruption from the pandemic created a stockpile of surplus jets that mean it is harder now to glean the production rate from deliveries.

 ?? Reuters ?? Boeing’s new 737 MAX-9 is pictured under constructi­on at their production facility in Renton, Washington. —
Reuters Boeing’s new 737 MAX-9 is pictured under constructi­on at their production facility in Renton, Washington. —

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