30 | Flight International | 11-17 June 2019 flightglobal.com
PARIS
Special report
After two crashes within five JON HEMMERDINGER BOSTON
months, Seattle has a tough
job to restore confidence
in narrowbody family as
uncertainty surrounds the
airframer’s attempts to
return it safely to service
Boeing beneath
shadow of the Max
I
magine, momentarily, that two Boeing 737
Max had not crashed, that 346 people had
not died and that regulators had not ground-
ed Boeing’s most popular aircraft. In such a
world, Boeing would be riding high at this
year’s Paris show, brimming with optimism
and promoting its 737 Max as a winner.
Reality, however, has other plans. Al-
though the company could land widebody
orders or announce news relating to its pro-
posed New Mid-market Airplane (NMA), the
737 Max crisis will overshadow all else.
What everyone wants to know is, when
will the 737 Max return to the skies? Boeing,
of course, is unable to answer that question;
return to service lies largely in the hands of
regulators who must evaluate a software fix
Boeing hopes will resolve the problem.
With so much uncertainty for Boeing, how
might the company, long among the most ad-
Re-engined type has
been under global
scrutiny this year