Boeing 737 MAX Makes First Passenger Flight in China Since March 2019

Boeing 737 MAX Makes First Passenger Flight in China Since March 2019
Sunlight glints off the wing of a Boeing 737 MAX 10 airplane parked at King County International Airport-Boeing Field in Seattle, Wash., on June 1, 2022. (Lindsey Wasson/Reuters)
Reuters
1/14/2023
Updated:
1/14/2023
0:00

BEIJING/SYDNEY—A Boeing Co. 737 MAX made its first passenger flight in China in nearly four years on Friday.

The China Southern Airlines Co. Ltd domestic flight from Guangzhou to Zhengzhou departed at 0445 GMT using a MAX plane, according to flight tracking website FlightRadar24.

The best-selling Boeing model was grounded in March 2019 after fatal crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia, but returned to service around the world starting in late 2020 after modifications to the aircraft and pilot training.

“Boeing continues to work with global regulators and customers to safely return the 737 MAX to service worldwide,” the planemaker said.

China is the last major market to resume flying the MAX amid ongoing trade tensions with the United States, and the return comes as domestic travel demand rebounds after the Chinese regime abandoned zero-COVID policies.

Foreign airlines began flying the MAX to China in October 2022, in a sign the first country to ground the model after the crashes was loosening its policies.

China Southern scheduled a return to commercial service for the 737 MAX in October 2022, but did not use it on the planned flights.

The airline did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Top Chinese Customer

Chinese airlines had 97 of the narrowbody planes before the grounding, according to Cirium data in 2019. China Southern is the biggest Chinese customer for the model, with 50 on order, of which 34 have been delivered.

Boeing in October said it had another 138 planes manufactured for Chinese carriers that were in the United States waiting to be delivered. It said it had begun re-marketing the jets to other carriers given there were no concrete signs that Chinese airlines would accept the planes in the near term.

China’s domestic aviation market had been depressed in 2022 because of sporadic lockdowns amid COVID-19 outbreaks, but demand is rising now that COVID-19 controls have been abandoned.

Boeing has been lagging far behind Airbus SE in deliveries into the world’s biggest aircraft market, in large part because of the MAX grounding.

In 2022, Boeing delivered eight airplanes to China while Airbus delivered more than 100.

Boeing has been virtually frozen out of new orders from China since 2017, whereas state-owned airlines last year placed a mega-order for nearly 300 Airbus planes.

Both Western manufacturers also face a fresh challenge in the market from the Chinese-made C919 narrowbody jet that was certified last year, though it will take time to ramp up production.