aviation industry

China maintains ban on Boeing 737 MAX flights

Agence France-Presse

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China maintains ban on Boeing 737 MAX flights

GROUNDED. This file photo, taken on June 5, 2019, shows grounded China Southern Airlines Boeing 737 MAX aircraft parked at Urumqi airport, in China's western Xinjiiang region.

Photo by Greg Baker/AFP

There is 'no set timetable' for the resumption of Boeing 737 MAX flights in top market China, which was also the first to suspend flights of the aircraft in 2019

China’s aviation regulator will not yet allow Boeing’s troubled 737 MAX jet to fly in the company’s biggest market owing to lingering safety concerns, despite the United States lifting a ban on commercial flights.

Boeing’s best-selling aircraft was grounded worldwide early last year following two crashes that killed 346 passengers. 

It has since faced lengthy tests and approval processes with aviation regulators worldwide. 

But the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) said on Friday, November 20, that there was “no set timetable” for the resumption of flights, according to state broadcaster CCTV, dealing a blow to the plane-making giant. 

China was the first to suspend flights of the aircraft. 

The regulator added that the results of investigations into the deadly crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia “must be made clear” and that the aircraft design improvements must be “effective” and “receive approval.”

The US Federal Aviation Administration on Wednesday, November 18, approved commercial flight operations of the plane.

The crashes are believed to be linked to a faulty anti-stall system called the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS), according to results from probes into the accidents.

Feng Zhenglin, director of the CAAC, said in October that China’s prompt grounding of the aircraft was based on “zero tolerance” towards potential safety hazards. 

Boeing said last week it expects China to buy more than 8,600 new airplanes worth $1.4 trillion in the next two decades, increasing its forecast as domestic travel in China has recovered to pre-outbreak levels. – Rappler.com

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