Boeing Max may be grounded in Indonesia beyond this year

Bloomberg

Indonesia signalled it may ground Boeing Co’s 737 Max until next year, underscoring the challenges faced by the US planemaker as it races to get its fastest-selling jet back in the air after two fatal crashes.
Even when the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) clears the plane, Indonesia will make its own decision after reviewing the proposed fixes, Director General of Civil Aviation Polana Pramesti said in an interview in Jakarta. Pilots in the country, where the first 737 Max crashed when a Lion Air plane plunged into the Java Sea, will undergo more stringent training before they are allowed to fly the jet, she said.
All in all, there are “lots of issues” and it’s unclear whether the plane will be able to fly in Indonesia this year, she said. “I can’t predict whether we will keep using the aircraft.”
The comments underscore how far Boeing has to go before its fastest-selling plane returns to the skies globally, even as the biggest US exporter finalises an update to a software system implicated in both crashes. The chief executive officer of Southwest Airlines Co, the largest operator of the Max, said he was hopeful the jet could return to service this summer.
Boeing won’t comment on the Indonesian regulator’s decision about the Max, a company spokeswoman in Singapore said, reiterating it has completed updating the software, the associated simulator testing, and the engineering test flight. Boeing will work with the FAA to schedule its certification test flight and submit the final documentation.
Officials from China, Canada and the European Union have signalled they intend to independently review changes to the Boeing planes before restoring flights. South Korean authorities are also said to be making their own decision, after closely monitoring steps taken by regulators in Europe and China.
Though Indonesia isn’t as large as China or Europe, Southeast Asia’s biggest economy is still a key regional aviation market as the government is planning the construction of 25 airports as part of an ambitious proposal for more than $400 billion in building projects over the next five years.
There’s more to why Indonesia has a big say when it comes to Boeing’s infamous plane. Two of the country’s carriers are among the biggest customers of the aircraft, and Lion Air Flight 610, which killed all 189 people on board, was the first Max to crash when it plunged into waters off Indonesia.
Less than five months later, a second Max crashed in Ethiopia, triggering a global grounding of the plane and investigations into how the aircraft was approved to fly. “Boeing has to assure us, the regulators, that the aircraft is safe,” said Pramesti, the first woman to head Indonesia’s civil aviation authority.
Though pilots who flew the previous 737 model could fly the newer Max by completing a course on an iPad for an hour or two, that process won’t cut it now, according to Pramesti.
Pilots in Indonesia will have to go through more stringent training, including in sophisticated flight simulators, she said.

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