If the aviation market continues to soften, Airbus and Boeing could face a disappointing year (AFP Photo/ERIC PIERMONT) |
Le Bourget (France) (AFP) - A top Boeing executive apologised Monday for two crashes of 737 MAX jets that together killed 346 people, disasters which have pushed safety to the top of the agenda as aerospace firms gathered for the opening of the Paris Air Show.
The US
aerospace giant is battling to regain the trust of passengers, pilots and
regulators after a 737 operated by Indonesia's Lion Air flight crashed last
October, followed by an Ethiopian Airlines jet in March.
"We
are very sorry for the loss of lives as a result of the tragic accidents... our
thoughts and our prayers are with their families," Boeing's head of
commercial aircraft Kevin McAllister told journalists at the air show.
"Our
priority is doing everything to get this plane safely returned to service. It
is a pivotal moment for all of us," he said.
But
McAllister and other executives faced a barrage of questions over Boeing's
handling of the 737 MAX disasters, thought to be caused by a faulty MCAS
anti-stall system.
Critics accuse Boeing of failing to sufficiently test a system that used just one sensor to determine if the 737 was at risk of stalling, and of failing to adequately inform and train pilots.
Boeing's Kevin McAllister apologised for the 737 MAX crashes, but questions remain (AFP Photo/ERIC PIERMONT) |
Critics accuse Boeing of failing to sufficiently test a system that used just one sensor to determine if the 737 was at risk of stalling, and of failing to adequately inform and train pilots.
Reports
also suggest that US safety regulators allowed Boeing engineers to self-certify
the system, prompting worries of insufficient oversight at the planemaker.
McAllister
said a planned fix for the anti-stall software would use two sensors, but it
has yet to submit its proposal to regulators, who have grounded the plane
indefinitely.
"We
are very confident that the three layers of protection we are planning with the
software update will prevent anything like this happening again," he said.
Europe's
new fighter jet
Several
executives at the Paris Air Show vowed to improve transparency over plane
safety in the wake of the 737 MAX crashes, while also pledging to reduce
emissions for an industry increasingly in the public spotlight.
Few blockbuster products or orders are expected at the world's biggest aerospace show, which brings together nearly 2,500 firms from 49 countries, and 290 official delegations, including government leaders and military chiefs.
The Paris Air Show kicked off with a markedly less self-congratulatory mood (AFP Photo/BENOIT TESSIER) |
Few blockbuster products or orders are expected at the world's biggest aerospace show, which brings together nearly 2,500 firms from 49 countries, and 290 official delegations, including government leaders and military chiefs.
But with passenger
traffic slowing this year, the atmosphere at the fair, where arch-rivals Boeing
and Airbus usually vie for aircraft orders, was markedly less
self-congratulatory than in recent years.
President
Emmanuel Macron inaugurated the event at Le Bourget airport after flying in on
a hulking grey Airbus A330 refuelling tanker operated by the French Air Force.
He then
attended the unveiling of a full-size model of the new fighter jet that France
and Germany are promoting as a symbol of their efforts to bolster European
defence autonomy at a time of fraying ties with the United States.
The stealth
plane is part of the ambitious Future Combat Air System (FCAS) that includes
next-generation drones and missiles, which would help reduce the EU's long
reliance on US planes and equipment.
The cooperation framework was later signed by the defence ministers of France, Germany and Spain, so far the only other EU nation to join the project, which aims to have its new plane in operation by 2040.
At an airbase near you in
about 20 years: The Future Combat Air System (FCAS)
jet (AFP Photo/ERIC
PIERMONT)
|
The cooperation framework was later signed by the defence ministers of France, Germany and Spain, so far the only other EU nation to join the project, which aims to have its new plane in operation by 2040.
Macron then
toured the vast exhibition halls at Le Bourget, where dozens of companies are
touting their efforts to make flying cleaner amid criticism of airlines' carbon
emissions.
Airbus
officially unveiled its A321 XLR jet, the latest iteration of its hugely
popular single-aisle A320, which can now cross the Atlantic thanks to increased
fuel efficiency.
That makes
it an option for airlines which currently have to use bigger, fuel-hungry
twin-aisle planes on longer routes.
The
US-based Air Lease Corporation has signed a letter of intent to buy 27 of the
planes, with deliveries to start in 2023.
France and
Germany hope to reduce their reliance on US equipment (AFP Photo/
BENOIT
TESSIER)
|
Clouds on
horizon
Both Airbus
and Boeing have suffered a wave of order cancellations as airlines grapple with
slowing passenger traffic growth since the start of this year.
And air
cargo shipments, often an indicator of passenger traffic trends, have been
slumping so far in 2019, reflecting the trade tensions prompted by US President
Donald Trump's move to impose tariffs on several European and Chinese imports.
If the
aviation market continues to soften, Airbus and Boeing could suffer their first
disappointing year after more than a decade of solid growth driven in
particular by the soaring numbers of people flying in Asia.
The two
industry leaders can take comfort from jam-packed order books after hefty
revenue growth last year, when their combined deliveries exceeded 1,600 planes.
Analysts
say nearly 40,000 planes will be in service by 2038, double the industry's
current fleet.
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