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China Southern Airlines scraps Boeing’s 737 MAX from its fleet deliveries through 2024

  • China Southern Airlines’ chairman Ma Xulun said that Boeing’s 737 MAX would be excluded from its fleet deliveries through 2024
  • China Southern is expected to take delivery of 78 aircraft over the period

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A fleet of Boeing 737 MAX aircraft bearing the livery of China Southern Airlines parked at Urumqi airport in western China’s Xinjiang regionon June 5, 2019. Photo: AFP

Boeing’s biggest airline customer in China has removed more than 100 of the US manufacturer’s 737 MAX jets from its fleet plans, citing uncertainty over deliveries.

China Southern Airlines’ chairman Ma Xulun said at an investor briefing last week that Boeing’s updated bestselling aircraft would be excluded from fleet deliveries through 2024. The carrier expects to take delivery of 78 aircraft in total over the period, down from 181 in a previous forecast in March.
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An investor relations representative for the airline said Friday the Max wasn’t included due to “uncertainty surrounding the delivery,” without providing further details.

The move is a sharp reversal for China Southern, which had outlined plans to rapidly expand its 737 MAX fleet, saying in its annual report in March that 39 were due to arrive this year, building toward a total of 103 deliveries through 2024. It’s a reminder of the uncertainty shrouding a key market for Boeing as it works to reap cash from more than 300 Max that were built but never delivered due to a global grounding.

Boeing referred queries to China Southern.
None of China’s state-owned carriers have said if or when they might resume taking the Max once it is officially back in service. China was the first to ground the Max in March 2019 following fatal crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia that combined killed 346 people.
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Brian West, Boeing’s chief financial officer, said that Max aircraft were on the verge of returning to regular airline service before a Covid outbreak decimated air travel in China earlier this year.

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