Reuters
The US Federal Aviation Administration distanced itself on Thursday
from suggestions by Boeing that its grounded 737 MAX could resume flying
passengers in October, saying regulators do not.... have a timeline for
vetting safety upgrades.
Boeing Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg told analysts last week he was
confident the MAX would be back in service as early as October after a
certification flight with regulators in September.
But the FAA’s top official declined to be pinned down on Boeing’s target
of October or any other timeline for clearing the plane, which was
grounded in March after two fatal crashes.
SEE ALSO :Lifeline for Boeing as British Airways owner orders 200- 737 MAX jets
“We
don’t have a timeline. Don’t have October. Don’t have August. Don’t
have 2021,” Acting Administrator Dan Elwell told reporters at the EAA
AirVenture air show in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. “We have one criterion. When
the 737 MAX has been - when the complications to it have been
satisfactorily assessed, and the MAX is safe to return to service,
that’s the only criteria,” Elwell said.
Boeing has stressed that the decision to let the MAX fly again commercially would be made by regulators.
The MAX’s return has been delayed as Chicago-based Boeing works to win
approval for reprogrammed stall-prevention software and related training
materials required in the wake of the crashes in Ethiopia and Indonesia
that together killed 346 people in the span of five months. US airlines
are cancelling thousands of monthly flights due to the grounding and
have warned of an increasing financial toll in the second half of the
year.
Southwest Airlines Company , a top customer, said on Thursday it was
scheduling without the MAX until early January and ending operations at
Newark Liberty International airport due to a scarcity of planes.
In late June, the FAA said it had identified a new risk as an agency
pilot was running a flight simulator test seeking to intentionally
activate the so-called MCAS stall-prevention system. During one
activation, it took an extended period to recover the stabiliser trim
system that is used to control the aircraft. Boeing has said it is
working on a fix to address the problem.
SEE ALSO :Southwest Airlines extends 737 MAX cancellations through October 1
The
European Aviation Safety Agency has handed the FAA and Boeing a list of
its own concerns that it wants addressed before the MAX re-enters
service, people familiar with the matter said. It includes the behaviour
of the autopilot - which EASA believes may take the aircraft too close
to a stall before automatically cutting out - as well as the physical
force needed by pilots to move a backup wheel that is part of the trim
system and extra training to help crew cope with simultaneous alarms.
Muilenburg said all submissions by foreign regulators had been
incorporated into Boeing’s assessment that the aircraft could re-enter
service as early as October.
He warned however that Boeing could have to further cut or even halt 737
production - still running at 80 per cent of previous output rates to
avoid disruption to parts production - if its forecasts prove to be too
optimistic.
That warning and a record quarterly loss weighed on Boeing shares on
Wednesday lasy week and at mid-session on Thursday they were down
another 3.4 per cent to Sh34,900.
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