The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: March 29, 2025
Today: March 29, 2025

Boeing to brief European regulators on new production plans after 737 MAX panel blowout

FILE PHOTO: 54th Paris Air Show at Le Bourget Airport near Paris
June 27, 2024
Allison Lampert - Reuters

By Allison Lampert

SEATTLE (Reuters) - Boeing is planning a briefing for high-level European regulatory officials about changes to the way it makes planes, a senior company executive said, after a January mid-air panel blowout sparked a safety crisis.

Boeing has been under pressure over factory controls since Jan. 5, when a door plug tore off an Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 jet, in an incident blamed on missing bolts.

Boeing to brief European regulators on new production plans after 737 MAX panel blowout
Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are assembled at the company's plant in Renton

Elizabeth Lund, Boeing's senior vice president quality, said on Tuesday the planemaker has a briefing with the top level of the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) coming up, with the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) participating.

The company will do the same with other regulators.

"We will ensure they are fully aware of all the steps we are taking as we go through this," Lund told reporters during a visit to the company's 737 factory in Renton, Washington, a Seattle suburb.

EASA's acting head said in March the agency would suspend its indirect approval of Boeing's jet production if warranted, but added he felt reassured that the planemaker was tackling its latest safety crisis.

Boeing to brief European regulators on new production plans after 737 MAX panel blowout
Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are assembled at the company's plant in Renton

Under a transatlantic pact, the FAA and EASA regulate the factories of their respective planemakers - Boeing and Airbus - and recognise each other's safety approvals. That relationship has been tested in the aftermath of two fatal MAX crashes in 2018 and 2019 respectively.

In February, the FAA told Boeing to develop a plan to address "systemic quality-control issues."

Boeing said it has increased investment in training, simplified work instructions and increased supplier oversight, after the Alaska Airlines MAX 9 jet made it to the end of the factory line with rivets that needed correcting.

Boeing has also introduced certain production milestones its planes will need to hit in order to advance to the next build position. The planemaker will consider mechanics' concerns if they believe the jet should be held back, said Jennifer Boland Masterson, a senior production director in the 737 program.

Boeing to brief European regulators on new production plans after 737 MAX panel blowout
Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are assembled at the company's plant in Renton

Lund said the Alaska Airlines door plug was opened without paperwork to fix the rivets, and the missing bolts were not replaced. The team that came in and closed the plug was not responsible for reinstalling the bolts, she said.

The accident, which led to an emergency landing, is under investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board.

The NTSB said early on Thursday it was sanctioning Boeing for disclosing non-public details of the ongoing investigation in the media briefing where Lund's comments were made and it was referring the planemaker's conduct to the Justice Department.

During the briefing, Lund said Boeing had "confidence that no other airplane was delivered like this based on the complete fleet check that we did," in reference to the Alaska Airlines jet.

Boeing to brief European regulators on new production plans after 737 MAX panel blowout
Boeing 737 MAX aircraft are assembled at the company's plant in Renton

Boeing is "willing and prepared" to obtain AS9100 certification, an internationally recognized aerospace standard for quality that the planemaker requires for its suppliers, she said. Boeing is already compliant with the standard and has been audited to the level as if it was certified, Lund added.

(Reporting by Allison Lampert in Seattle; Editing by Jamie Freed)

Related Articles

Boeing executive says supplier Spirit Aero has a substantial inventory of 737 fuselages Boeing executive sees supply-demand balance by end of decade Boeing, DOJ tell US judge they have not reached agreement on revised plea deal NASA's 2 stuck astronauts face more time in space with return delayed until at least late March
Share This

Popular

Asia|Business|Economy|Political

China state media blasts CK Hutchison's Panama port deal in soon-deleted post

China state media blasts CK Hutchison's Panama port deal in soon-deleted post
Business|Economy|Europe|Finance

UniCredit gets ECB approval for Banco BPM buy, to weigh options

UniCredit gets ECB approval for Banco BPM buy, to weigh options
Business|Europe|Political|US

US warns French companies they must comply with Trump's diversity ban

US warns French companies they must comply with Trump's diversity ban
Asia|Business|Economy|Political|World

South Korea, China industry ministers agree to cooperate in evolving global environment, Seoul says

South Korea, China industry ministers agree to cooperate in evolving global environment, Seoul says

Europe

Business|Europe|Political|US

US warns French companies they must comply with Trump's diversity ban

US warns French companies they must comply with Trump's diversity ban
Crime|Europe|World

Former Church of England leader says scale of abuse scandal was 'overwhelming'

Former Church of England leader says scale of abuse scandal was 'overwhelming'
Europe|Political|US|World

Vance accuses Denmark of underinvesting in Greenland as Trump presses for US takeover of the island

Vance accuses Denmark of underinvesting in Greenland as Trump presses for US takeover of the island
Arts|Business|Economy|Europe|Lifestyle

No longer 'poor but sexy?' Berlin's economic rise comes at a price

No longer 'poor but sexy?' Berlin's economic rise comes at a price