Fort Worth, Texas-based American, with 24 MAX jets at the time of the grounding and dozens more on order, said it will cancel about 140 daily flights through December 3, more than the 115 daily cancellations it was making through the summer. Travel agent It had previously pulled its 737 MAX jets from its flight schedule through November 2. Customers whose flights are affected by the cancellations will be contacted by American or their travel agent, the carrier said. Among other US airlines that operate the MAX, Southwest Airlines Company has cancelled flights into early January and United Airlines until December 19. Meanwhile, the Federal Aviation Administration said on Friday a blue-ribbon panel of experts around the world will need a few more weeks to finish its review into the Boeing 737 MAX certification. The team, which is reviewing the approval of the now grounded jet involved in two fatal crashes since October, is taking additional time to finish documenting its work and the FAA said it expects its recommendations in the coming weeks. SEE ALSO :Southwest Airlines extends 737 MAX cancellations through October 1
Boeing Company has said it hopes to receive regulatory approval for updated flight control software at the centre of both crashes in October, but it could take a month or two for airlines to train pilots on the new software and prepare the jets for commercial flight after sitting idle for months.
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