Southwest Airlines Executive Anticipates Boeing’s 737 MAX 7 Certification by April

Southwest Airlines Executive Anticipates Boeing’s 737 MAX 7 Certification by April

CHICAGO, Nov 10 (Reuters) – Southwest Airlines (LUV.N) expects Boeing’s (BA.N) 737​ MAX‌ 7 plane will get certification from the U.S.‍ Federal Aviation​ Administration by ‌April, allowing the​ carrier to start flying the⁤ aircraft in October and November 2024, a company executive told Reuters.

Dallas-based Southwest⁣ is the largest customer of the⁢ plane, the smallest model in Boeing’s MAX ‌family. Last month, it⁤ unveiled new orders for an additional 108 MAX​ 7 planes for‍ deliveries‍ through 2031.

“For our internal planning ⁤purposes, we assume it’ll be certified in April and then flying for us in the ​October-November time ⁢frame,” Andrew Watterson,⁤ chief operating officer at Southwest, said‌ in⁣ an interview late⁣ Thursday.

He said, however, that the April ‌estimate includes a buffer and certification could still happen this year or in early 2024 as Boeing is making progress with the FAA resolving open items on ⁢certification. ​”We ​don’t ⁢want a delay to affect our plans so we‍ put padding‍ in there,” ‍Watterson said.

“We’re getting closer and closer,” Watterson said‍ of the certification⁣ work. “We’re towards the end here.”

Boeing has ​said it⁢ expects MAX⁤ 7 certification by ⁢the‍ end of this year. In October, company executives said its schedule remained⁢ unchanged, with​ CEO Dave Calhoun saying the company will give the FAA‌ “all​ the flexibility they need” to make‌ the call.

A Boeing spokesperson declined‍ to comment further.

The MAX 7 ⁣is expected to provide Southwest flexibility to adjust capacity to‌ suit demand as passenger traffic tends to vary ⁣depending on ⁣the time of day and the day of the week.

However, delays in certification have forced Southwest to convert dozens of orders for 150-seater ‌MAX 7 aircraft‌ into​ the ‌larger 175-seater MAX ⁢8 ‌variant.

The Federal Aviation Administration, which‌ did‌ not immediately comment Friday, has repeatedly declined to comment on‌ the timing of​ the MAX 7 certification, saying “safety dictates the timeline of certification projects.”

MAX planes were grounded worldwide following two crashes in 2018 and 2019 that killed 346 people.

Both ⁤the MAX 7 and the largest‌ model‌ MAX 10 are waiting​ for the ​FAA’s certification,⁤ with MAX ⁤10 slated for its first delivery in 2024. They are seen as critical for⁣ Boeing to compete against Airbus (AIR.PA) for orders at the top and bottom ‍of the narrowbody markets.

“The fact that the number of⁤ open ‍items is ⁤converging, not diverging like it was probably ‍a year ago, shows that they’re⁢ getting ‌closer ⁣and closer,” Watterson ‌said.

Some analysts and industry ⁣officials say ⁤flying a bigger⁢ plane with more ​seats in a domestic market that is ​already flooded with excess​ capacity ​is hurting Southwest’s​ profits.

Watterson, however, disagreed with that view. He ⁤said the ⁣airline ‍has a decent balance of big and smaller aircraft to match supply and demand.

“If we were like 80 big aircraft, 20 smaller aircraft that would ‍be a problem, but we’re 50-50 right now,” he said. ‍”So, we have plenty of latitude.”

Reporting by Rajesh ‍Kumar Singh and…

Link from www.reuters.com

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