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Air Current reports that Boeing is weighing 737 production ramp-up in order to reach Airbus targets.

The 'Air Current' reported on Thursday that Boeing is looking at increasing production of its best-selling 737 jet beyond the publicly?stated goal of 63 aircraft a month.

Reports citing sources familiar with the situation said that the planemaker was drafting plans and evaluating whether its suppliers would support a production increase of 70 narrowbody jets per month.

The ambitious target would test Boeing's supply chain, and bring its production plans closer to Airbus's output goals for the 'competing narrowbody' family.

The report stated that the studies were at an early stage, and the higher cadence might not be adopted.

Boeing didn't?response immediately to a request for comment.

After consulting with the U.S. federal aviation administration, the U.S. planemaker announced in May that it would increase production of its 737 MAX aircraft to 47 per monthly from 42.

Kelly Ortberg, CEO of the company, had stated?at a conference in May that "we're on and rolling at a 47-percent rate and should be there within the next couple months."

Airbus had long sought to produce 75 A320neo family jets per month, but was forced to push the goal back due to supply chain constraints. Airbus now plans to reach 70-75 jets per month by?end 2027. Production will then be stabilized at 75.

The company produces an average of 60 narrowbody aircraft per month. Reporting by Shivansh Tiwary, Bengaluru. Editing by Shilpa Majumdar.

(source: Reuters)