Boeing Loses Orders
2022.12.13 11:20
Boeing Loses Orders
Budrigannews.com – (NYSE) Boeing According to a statement released on Tuesday by the American planemaker, co deliveries increased to 48 aircraft in November while new orders decreased to 21 aircraft, consisting of 18 737 MAXs and three 767s.
In October, the company only delivered 35 aircraft. Stan Deal, the chief executive officer of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, stated that the quality management system’s detection of “a defect in the fuselage, two defects, and delayed deliveries” was the cause of the October decline in 737 MAX deliveries.
After 15 months of halting deliveries of 787s due to production and quality issues, Boeing’s inspection and modification plan was approved by the Federal Aviation Administration in August.
After Boeing received 122 new orders in October, including 10 787 Dreamliners and 106 737 MAXs, November’s orders were lower. This was an increase from September, when it placed 96 orders for new aircraft and had six cancellations.
Ten 737 MAXs were delivered to Southwest Airlines in November (NYSE:). and United Airlines received five.
On Tuesday, Boeing was promoting United’s new order for 100 737 MAXs and 100 787 Dreamliners at its final assembly plant in South Carolina. Those figures will be included in the subsequent monthly update.
It still faces the possibility of 737 MAX 7 and MAX 10 delays. Boeing has up to this point not won endorsement for an expansion from Congress of a Dec. 27 cutoff time forcing another wellbeing standard for current cockpit alarms after two deadly 737 MAX crashes.
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Boeing’s November deliveries were behind the 51 it delivered in September, when it reached the 50-plane mark for the first time since March 2019, matching its June performance.
There are 32 737 MAXs delivered in November, up from 23 in October but still down from 37 in September.
Boeing would “recover on that quickly,” Deal stated at the time. We will recover for our deliveries at the end of the year and be able to surge.”
In the first eleven months of 2022, Boeing delivered 411 aircraft, including 333 737s and 21 787s.
Boeing’s requests net of retractions for the year rose in November to 571 from 550, and its business accumulation rose from 4,441 to 4,415 orders.