Aviation

After 20 Months, FAA Gives Boeing’s 737 MAX Approval to Fly Again

B737 MAX

After 20 months of intense scrutiny and corrections, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued an order o Wednesday that gave approval for the troubled Boeing 737 MAX to carry passengers again.

CNN reported that the plane, the best-selling jet in Boeing’s (BA) fleet, was grounded in March 2019 after two fatal crashes that killed 346 people after it was discovered that a safety feature meant to stop the plane from climbing too fast and stalling had improperly forced the nose of the plane down, causing the crashes.

According to CNN report, the process of approving the plane to carry passengers has stretched on far longer than originally expected and cost Boeing more than $20 billion, as disclosed by the company.

Lost orders for the jet during that time could make it among the most expensive mistakes ever made by a company.

The report indicated that approval was expected this week, Boeing (BA) shares nonetheless rose 6 per cent in premarket trading Wednesday.

CNN explained that the FAA action was only the first step in allowing 59 airlines, which own the 387-grounded planes to fly them as part of their schedule.

The FAA said in a statement before any of the planes can be flown with passengers again, the necessary changes to the 737 Max identified in the approval process must be installed; the FAA must inspect the individual planes. The pilots must also complete additional training.

That process is expected to take between a few weeks and a few months, depending on the airline. So far only American Airlines (AAL) has added the plane to its schedule for a handful of flights between Miami and New York in late December and early January.

Other airlines are holding off. Southwest (LUV), which has 34 of the jets — more than any other airline — isn’t expected to fly passengers on the 737 Max until spring of 2021.

However, some of the family members of those who died in the crashes have objected to the return to service for the plane. They say Boeing made mistakes in the design of the 737 Max, the newest version of a long-serving plane, which made their version dangerous, and the FAA made mistakes approving the original version and recertifying it to fly now.

“The plane is inherently unstable and it is unairworthy without its software,” said Michael Stumo, whose daughter Samaya Rose Stumo died in the March 2019 crash of an Ethiopian Airlines plane. “They haven’t fixed it so far. The flying public should avoid the Max in the future. Change your flight.”

Stumo and other family members had a press conference Tuesday ahead of the announcement. Stumo said the FAA should have insisted on a third sensor be added to determine if the plane is in danger of stalling. He said other changes should have been made to the way pilots are alerted if there is a problem.

“We as family members want to avoid a third crash,” he said.

The investigation into how to fix the plane was originally expected to be finished by the fall of 2019, but stretched on as new questions about the plane arose.

THISDAY

Avatar

Aviation Media

About Author

Aviation Media Africa is a media platform that publishes the latest news and insights in aviation, maritime, and transport across Africa.

You may also like

Aviation

Fadugba: Nigeria has Unstable Regulatory Environment

  • August 1, 2015
The CEO of African Aviation Services Limited and former Director General, African Airlines Association (AFRAA), Nick Fadugba said that for
Aviation

Interview with Chris Aligbe :FG Should Grant Aviation Infant Industry Status

  • October 1, 2015
Industry consultant and CEO of Belujane Konsult, Chris Aligbe appraises the kind of minister the aviation industry needs as well