Business Day

India lifts ban on flights by Boeing’s 737 Max planes

- Anurag Kotoky

India lifted its ban on Boeing’s 737 Max jet, a big boost to the American plane maker that leaves China as the only leading aviation market not yet to allow the aircraft to resume service.

India’s decision comes after it observed “no untoward reporting” on jets already flying since 17 global regulators allowed it to resume flights, the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation said in an order posted on its website on Thursday.

Boeing shares were down 0.91% at $219.05 by 11.30am in New York. The stock climbed 3.3% in the year to Wednesday while the Dow Jones industrial average advanced 16%.

EXTENSIVE FIXES

The Max was grounded worldwide more than two years ago after crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia killed 346 people. While the US, Europe and most other big markets allowed the jet to resume flights in late 2020 or earlier this year after extensive fixes, India and China held back.

Boeing is still working with Chinese authoritie­s to lift the ban there and has conducted a test flight in the country, though it could take months before commercial flights resume.

Airbus SE A320s dominate the skies in India, while Boeing has only one customer with orders: SpiceJet.

But the plane maker is in advanced discussion­s with Akasa, a new Indian airline backed by billionair­e investor Rakesh Jhunjhunwa­la, to sell it as many as 80 Max planes, Bloomberg News has reported.

Boeing forecasts that airlines in India will need more than 2,200 new jets worth almost $320bn over the next 20 years as an emerging middle class upgrades from trains and buses.

Boeing has met local requiremen­ts in India to resume flights, including setting up a simulator in the South Asian nation, and India is now satisfied with the jet’s performanc­e, Bloomberg News reported earlier this month. In April India allowed Max jets registered in other nations to enter its airspace if the flight was permitted by the registerin­g authority in the country of origin.

 ?? /Reuters/File ?? Low-cost flier: A SpiceJet plane at the internatio­nal airport in the city of Ahmedabad. SpiceJet is the only Indian airline that uses Boeing planes.
/Reuters/File Low-cost flier: A SpiceJet plane at the internatio­nal airport in the city of Ahmedabad. SpiceJet is the only Indian airline that uses Boeing planes.

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