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Boeing is preparing to resume plane deliveries in China as the tariff war eases

FlightRadar24 reports that a new Boeing 737 MAX painted in Xiamen Airlines' livery, and on its first leg of the route to shuttle jets to Xiamen Airlines' delivery center in China.

The Boeing jet was headed for Kailua-Kona in Hawaii, which is one of many refueling stations Boeing jets stop at on their way to China across the Pacific. The Chinese customers received their deliveries.

The abrupt halt

Early April, as the U.S. & China were edging towards a trade conflict.

Boeing's spokesperson refused to comment on where the jetliner will end up. Neither Xiamen Airlines nor the Chinese government responded to requests for comment.

In April, the United States and China agreed to roll back tariffs for 90 days in response to President Donald Trump's tariffs. On May 12, however, the U.S. & China agreed to reduce the tariffs by 90 days.

Trump announced on Friday that U.S. representatives and Chinese representatives will meet in London, England, June 9, to discuss a possible trade agreement.

On May 29, Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg said that Chinese airlines will resume receiving Boeing aircraft deliveries in June.

Boeing brought back at least three 737 MAX jets to the United States from its Zhoushan completion centre near Shanghai in April. These jets had been taken there for final preparations before being delivered to Chinese carriers. The plane that flew to Hawaii on Friday was the first one to return from China.

Boeing had previously stated that customers in China wouldn't take delivery of new aircraft due to tariffs. It was also looking to resell dozens of planes.

Beijing has not stated why Boeing deliveries have stopped but claimed that Chinese airlines and Boeing were severely affected by U.S. tariffs.

China is a growing and important aviation market, representing about 10% of Boeing’s commercial backlog.

Boeing announced in April that it planned to deliver 50 jets to Chinese carriers in the remainder of the year. Of these, 41 were in production or had been pre-built.

Boeing has said that other airlines would be interested in purchasing the rejected Chinese planes. However, the planemaker did not send the planes anywhere else despite its goal to reduce the inventory.

(source: Reuters)