"The crash of a Boeing jet in China on
Monday is the latest crisis for the American plane manufacturer, raising the
prospect of renewed regulatory scrutiny and confronting the company with
another catastrophe involving its planes.
It could be weeks or even months before investigators
identify what caused the Boeing 737-800 NG operated by China Eastern Airlines to plunge from the sky with more
than 130 people aboard. But the outcome of the investigation could weigh
heavily on Boeing, which recently overcame years of troubles involving a newer variant of the
single-aisle 737, the Max, and has had long delays in producing and
delivering the twin-aisle 787 Dreamliner.
“I think it’s going to be very
important to see what actually happened with this particular incident because
there’s a credibility concern,” said Rob Spingarn, a managing director at
Melius Research, a financial analysis firm. “I think the investment community
will pause to some extent on Boeing until that information is out.”
Thousands of 737-800 NG planes have
safely traversed the globe in recent decades, and many industry analysts and
experts were disinclined to conclude that Monday’s crash indicated any
fundamental design flaw. But Boeing’s stock fell 3.6 percent nonetheless.
Shares of China Eastern ended 6.5 percent lower in trading in Hong Kong.
An icon of the aviation age, Boeing
is the largest manufacturing exporter in the United States, a blue chip stock
and a major employer. It is also one of the federal government’s biggest
contractors.
Last year was its best for sales
since 2018, with net orders of 535 planes. But it has endured
repeated setbacks, including a $3.5 billion charge in the final three months of
2021 from the Dreamliner delays, driving the company to a $4.2 billion loss for the
quarter.
In addition to its difficulties with
the Max and the Dreamliner, two flagship planes, Boeing has had to contend with
an industry slowdown resulting from the coronavirus pandemic. With air travel
recovering only slowly to 2019 levels, airlines have cut back plans to buy new
planes.
Boeing’s recent problems began with the Max, which was
widely criticized after one of the planes crashed in Indonesia
in late 2018 and a second crashed in Ethiopia in
March 2019. All 346 people aboard the planes were killed, and the Max was
grounded worldwide after the second crash.
Those disasters brought regulatory
rebukes, several lawsuits, and billions of dollars in fines, settlements and
lost orders. The United States approved the Max for flight again in late 2020,
requiring Boeing to make certain changes to the plane. That prompted similar
approval from other countries, but regulators in China granted approval only in
early December.
Industry analysts had expected the Max to resume flying in
China in the coming months. But its return could become intertwined with the
investigation into the crash of the 737-800 NG, analysts said, with Chinese
government officials hesitant to bring back the Max as they investigate a crash
involving its predecessor.
The Max crashes were directly tied to flight-control
software known as MCAS, which the Max is the only commercial airliner to use.
That system was introduced to the Max to account for changes made when the
plane was upgraded from the NG, or Next Generation, line.
On Monday, Boeing said that it was
in touch with China Eastern Airlines and with the National Transportation
Safety Board, the agency leading U.S. efforts in assisting China’s
investigation into the crash.
The safety board said that it had
appointed a senior investigator as the representative to the investigation and
that Boeing, the manufacturer of the plane’s engines and the Federal Aviation
Administration would contribute technical expertise. Boeing also said that its
technical experts were “prepared to assist” China’s aviation authority, the
Civil Aviation Administration of China.
The Boeing 737-800 NG is a workhorse
of the skies. Boeing delivered nearly 5,000 of the planes between 1998 and
2020, far more than any of the other commercial planes it sells, according to Boeing data. Along with the Max, it holds special
appeal for airlines because of its passenger capacity and travel range.
Single-aisle planes are typically used for domestic flights, though some
airlines use them for shorter international trips.
For Boeing and its 737 family, China
is an important market. Of the 25,000 passenger planes in service worldwide,
about 17 percent are Boeing 737-800 NGs, according to Cirium, an aviation data
firm. China is home to nearly 1,200, followed by Europe, with nearly 1,000, and
the United States, with nearly 800. In the United States, American Airlines has
265 in service, while Southwest Airlines has 205, United Airlines has 136 and
Delta Air Lines has 77, according to Cirium.
China is also the second-largest
market for Boeing planes, after the United States. Last year, the company forecast that the
number of commercial planes in China would double by 2040, with airlines there
needing 8,700 new aircraft by then, valued at about $1.47 trillion.
The country is perhaps even more
crucial for Boeing’s leading rival, Airbus. Last year, Airbus delivered 142
commercial aircraft to China, its largest single-country market, representing a
quarter of its production.
Airbus has a mammoth assembly line
in Tianjin, China, producing A320 single-aisle planes and A330 wide-body
passenger jets. It also has relationships with Chinese airlines and helicopter
operators, and many components in Airbus jets are made by Chinese companies.
The value of industrial cooperation between Airbus and China was $900 million
in 2018, up from $500 million in 2015, according to Airbus.
But as important as China is,
Boeing’s relationship with the country can be complicated. When tensions rise
between China and the United States — as they did during former President
Donald J. Trump’s trade war — Boeing can find itself
at a disadvantage.
“As someone once said, they’ve
always been the designated hostage in any kind of U.S.-China geopolitical
standoff,” said Richard Aboulafia, a managing director at AeroDynamic Advisory,
an aviation consulting firm.
In addition, as China’s economy cools, so, too,
could its expanding travel sector, testing Boeing’s reliance on the country.
And then there is the Comac C919, China’s homegrown
competitor to the 737. The plane is set to debut this year and poses a
long-term threat to Boeing and Airbus in China. But analysts widely expect it
could be years before China refines the plane, begins large-scale production
and supports its domestic growth with readily available parts and maintenance.
“All of these things take time to
develop,” said Mr. Spingarn of Melius Research. “That’s why you don’t have more
aircraft manufacturers.”"
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