Berliner Boersenzeitung - China operates first domestic Boeing 737 MAX flight since 2019

EUR -
AED 4.029476
AFN 74.568839
ALL 98.734694
AMD 424.440047
ANG 1.978982
AOA 996.661045
ARS 1068.807326
AUD 1.625895
AWG 1.974702
AZN 1.86196
BAM 1.95509
BBD 2.217144
BDT 131.222342
BGN 1.955591
BHD 0.413393
BIF 3186.239502
BMD 1.097057
BND 1.430889
BOB 7.58814
BRL 6.073525
BSD 1.098076
BTN 92.145214
BWP 14.554117
BYN 3.593711
BYR 21502.308694
BZD 2.213415
CAD 1.497866
CDF 3154.037487
CHF 0.940984
CLF 0.037122
CLP 1024.31079
CNY 7.743245
CNH 7.744479
COP 4641.734095
CRC 569.154382
CUC 1.097057
CUP 29.071999
CVE 110.223461
CZK 25.32121
DJF 195.544525
DKK 7.457538
DOP 66.051496
DZD 145.944689
EGP 53.261328
ERN 16.455848
ETB 133.309316
FJD 2.436891
FKP 0.835473
GBP 0.838195
GEL 2.983543
GGP 0.835473
GHS 17.471416
GIP 0.835473
GMD 74.053376
GNF 9476.910246
GTQ 8.49407
GYD 229.633461
HKD 8.525484
HNL 27.426121
HRK 7.4589
HTG 144.70887
HUF 399.160191
IDR 17101.027457
ILS 4.128555
IMP 0.835473
INR 92.105583
IQD 1437.144101
IRR 46186.081468
ISK 148.695315
JEP 0.835473
JMD 173.399911
JOD 0.777481
JPY 162.958425
KES 141.674275
KGS 93.316842
KHR 4453.118851
KMF 492.825215
KPW 987.350288
KRW 1471.635445
KWD 0.336259
KYD 0.915172
KZT 535.218056
LAK 24247.088735
LBP 98337.63348
LKR 321.738486
LRD 211.943026
LSL 19.176523
LTL 3.239323
LVL 0.663599
LYD 5.251973
MAD 10.759379
MDL 19.327069
MGA 5037.963638
MKD 61.597348
MMK 3563.196933
MNT 3727.798162
MOP 8.793766
MRU 43.47224
MUR 50.485945
MVR 16.845304
MWK 1904.112994
MXN 21.217639
MYR 4.698648
MZN 70.047249
NAD 19.176523
NGN 1778.087286
NIO 40.413481
NOK 11.750809
NPR 147.419381
NZD 1.797893
OMR 0.422367
PAB 1.098096
PEN 4.09054
PGK 4.315197
PHP 62.550328
PKR 304.652299
PLN 4.301956
PYG 8560.695804
QAR 3.993838
RON 4.977018
RSD 117.032921
RUB 106.411127
RWF 1498.894142
SAR 4.119076
SBD 9.104831
SCR 14.922749
SDG 659.87032
SEK 11.349198
SGD 1.429673
SHP 0.835473
SLE 25.064784
SLL 23004.72202
SOS 627.546344
SRD 34.77838
STD 22706.855968
SVC 9.608554
SYP 2756.387464
SZL 19.169601
THB 36.657592
TJS 11.684057
TMT 3.839698
TND 3.367531
TOP 2.569417
TRY 37.59858
TTD 7.44433
TWD 35.28715
TZS 2989.479068
UAH 45.215911
UGX 4035.479199
USD 1.097057
UYU 45.393514
UZS 14042.324092
VEF 3974145.043611
VES 40.621551
VND 27242.657175
VUV 130.24476
WST 3.068975
XAF 655.685993
XAG 0.035833
XAU 0.000419
XCD 2.96485
XDR 0.81687
XOF 655.703916
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.62072
ZAR 19.260638
ZMK 9874.825129
ZMW 29.125564
ZWL 353.251767
  • RBGPF

    59.3300

    59.33

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    6.91

    -0.87%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    24.64

    +0.28%

  • GSK

    -0.6100

    38.02

    -1.6%

  • SCS

    -0.1700

    12.78

    -1.33%

  • NGG

    0.4200

    65.9

    +0.64%

  • AZN

    0.0000

    76.87

    0%

  • BP

    -1.1100

    32.03

    -3.47%

  • BTI

    0.0200

    35.22

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -2.9600

    66.66

    -4.44%

  • RELX

    0.6000

    46.64

    +1.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    9.66

    -0.31%

  • CMSD

    0.0610

    24.851

    +0.25%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.16

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    0.7500

    142.02

    +0.53%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    33.51

    -0.06%

China operates first domestic Boeing 737 MAX flight since 2019
China operates first domestic Boeing 737 MAX flight since 2019 / Photo: Greg Baker - AFP/File

China operates first domestic Boeing 737 MAX flight since 2019

A Boeing 737 MAX took off from southern China on Friday, the first domestic flight using the aircraft model since March 2019 when it was grounded after two deadly crashes.

Text size:

The resumption of flights is a boost for the American manufacturer in one of its most important markets.

China was among the first countries to ground the plane after two fatal accidents involving its flight control software in 2018 and 2019, and was the last major Boeing market to rescind the ban.

On Friday a China Southern Airlines flight left the city of Guangzhou in the afternoon headed for Zhengzhou, tracking website Flightradar24 showed.

A second 737 MAX took off from Guangzhou later in the day, flying to the central city of Wuhan.

Operators had been unable to fly the plane in Chinese airspace since March 2019 when an Ethiopian Airlines flight crashed shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa, killing 157 people.

That accident came five months after the crash of another 737 MAX in Indonesia, where 189 people died.

Investigators said a major cause of both tragedies was a faulty flight handling system known as the Manoeuvring Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS).

After modifications were made to the software and pilot training, the aircraft was cleared to fly again in the United States in November 2020, followed by other countries.

Beijing deemed the jet airworthy in December 2021, predicting it would return to Chinese airspace by "the end of the year or early (2022)".

However, the need to clear final hurdles with regulators meant the wait was longer than expected.

Lingering trade tensions with the United States and China's deadliest plane crash for nearly 30 years in 2022 also slowed progress.

But there had recently been signs that carriers would be allowed to resume using the 737 MAX.

MIAT Mongolian Airlines flew one in and out of China on a round trip from Ulaanbaatar to Guangzhou in October, a route which has since been repeated.

Neither China Southern Airlines nor the Chinese civil aviation regulator were immediately contactable for comment regarding Friday's flights.

Boeing's China office declined to comment and referred AFP to aircraft operators.

- Challenge for Boeing -

The ban had affected most airlines operating in the Asia-Pacific region, and presented major challenges for Boeing.

The company said in October it was seeking other potential customers for the 737 MAX because China was still not taking delivery of the jets it had ordered.

In addition, China's zero-tolerance Covid-19 policies had "reduced demand for airplanes in general", Boeing Chief Executive Dave Calhoun said at the time.

In early December, China began the process of reversing years of its zero-Covid policy -- which had included border closures, tight restrictions on movement within the country and lengthy quarantines for travellers.

The loosening has boosted hopes in the travel industry that China might soon open up fully to foreigners.

China is also hoping to challenge the dominance of foreign aircraft models like the 737 MAX with its own domestically produced passenger jet, though most of its parts are sourced from abroad.

The C919 jetliner is expected to make its commercial debut early this year.

The number of known deals for the C919 stands at more than 1,100, based on figures from the state-owned Commercial Aircraft Corp of China (COMAC).

And Boeing has other international rivals too.

China sealed a deal for Airbus jets worth $17 billion last year and the European company began producing its A321 model in the northeastern Chinese city of Tianjin.

(F.Schuster--BBZ)