Latest News

Boeing accelerates 737 production as safety and quality culture improves

Doug Ackerman, Vice President of Quality for Commercial Airplanes at Boeing, told reporters Tuesday that the company expects to stabilize 737 MAX output at 38 aircraft per month in the coming months. After a mid air panel blowout on a brand new 737, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration set a monthly production limit of 38 aircrafts. Boeing's best-selling plane had been fluctuating between the teens to the thirties in monthly production. But the company has struggled with a series crises and controversy that have weakened its finances, damaged employee morale, and undermined public trust. The U.S. aircraft manufacturer needs to increase production of the 737 to generate more cash after losing $12 billion in 2012.

Two sources familiar with the situation said that the company was on track to manufacture about 38 single-aisle aircrafts in May. Boeing's spokesperson refused to comment on May's production rate.

Boeing's chief executive Kelly Ortberg said previously that the company must prove that it can continue production at this level for several more months before asking the FAA to raise the cap.

Ackerman stated that once production runs smoothly, Ackerman's company will also begin work to add a fourth line.

Boeing has made steady progress in all six metrics for production quality and safety created by the company, as well as regulators. This is according to the annual Chief Aerospace Safety Officer Report released on Wednesday.

The report states that the number of safety concerns reported by employees through the Speak Up system has increased by 220% between 2023 and 2024.

Don Ruhmann, the Chief Aerospace Safety officer at the Tuesday media briefing, said that the program is becoming more effective as a result of the ongoing changes.

Safety concerns, for example, are now assessed by managers in other sections, who are likely to be more impartial than those who supervise the work.

Boeing uses machine learning as well to detect quality issues in its supply chain and fix them before they spread. Ackerman stated that while the company is still "fine-tuning" its approach, they are seeing statistical correlations in the data between supply chain issues and the data. Reporting by Dan Catchpole and Allison Lampert, both in Seattle; editing by Kirby Donovan.

(source: Reuters)