American Airlines cancels Boeing 737 MAX flights until Jan. 16
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[October 09, 2019] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - American Airlines
Group Inc <AAL.O> said Wednesday it is extending cancellations of Boeing
737 MAX flights through Jan. 15 as regulators continue to extensively
review proposed software changes to the grounded plane.
The largest U.S. airline, which had previously canceled about 140
flights a day through Dec. 3, said Wednesday it expects to gradually
resume MAX flights starting Jan. 16.
American said it believes the software updates will lead to the Federal
Aviation Administration's (FAA) "recertification of the aircraft later
this year and resumption of commercial service in January 2020."
The FAA said Wednesday it is "is following a thorough process, not a
prescribed timeline, for returning the Boeing 737 Max to passenger
service. The FAA will lift the aircraft's prohibition order when it is
deemed safe to do so."
The fast-selling 737 MAX has been grounded worldwide since mid-March
while Boeing updates flight control software at the center of two
crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia that together killed 346 people within
a span of five months.
Among other U.S. airlines that operate the MAX, Southwest Airlines Co <LUV.N>
has canceled flights through Jan. 5 and United Airlines Holdings Inc <UAL.O>
until Dec. 19.
An ongoing regulatory safety review means a key 737 MAX certification
test flight is unlikely before November, Reuters reported Tuesday.
Boeing has repeatedly said it hopes to resume flights in the fourth
quarter, which began on Oct. 1.
FAA Administrator Steve Dickson told Reuters in September the agency
would need about a month following the yet-to-be scheduled certification
test flight before the planes could return to service.
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An aerial photo shows Boeing 737 MAX aircraft at Boeing facilities
at the Grant County International Airport in Moses Lake, Washington,
September 16, 2019. REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson/File Photo
Boeing plans to revise the 737 MAX software to take input from both of its
angle-of-attack sensors in the anti-stall system linked to the two deadly
crashes and has added additional safeguards. Boeing is also addressing a flaw
discovered in the software architecture of the 737 MAX flight-control system
that involves using and receiving input from the plane's two flight control
computers rather than one.
Meanwhile, airlines that had purchased the fuel-efficient MAX have canceled
thousands of monthly flights as they scramble to meet demand with slimmer
fleets, eating in to profit and hurting some growth plans.
On Monday, the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association sued Boeing alleging that
the planemaker "deliberately misled" the airline and pilots about its 737 MAX
aircraft. The grounding of the 737 MAX has wiped out more than 30,000 Southwest
Airlines flights, causing over $100 million in lost wages for pilots, the union
said. Boeing said the suit is "meritless."
Fort Worth, Texas-based American, with 24 MAX jets at the time of the grounding
and dozens more on order, said it expects to resume about 20 MAX flights a day
in mid-January and plans to slowly return the MAX into commercial service
throughout January and into February.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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