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US FAA is not considering lifting the Boeing 737 MAX Production Cap

Acting Federal Aviation Administration head said he was not considering lifting a cap on Boeing 737 MAX production of 38 planes a month imposed in January 2024 after a mid-air accident involving a brand new Alaska Airlines Boeing aircraft missing four bolts.

After a hearing in the U.S. House, Acting FAA Administrator Chris Rocheleau said to reporters: "Not right now." He said he wasn't discussing a change in the FAA's policy to inspect all Boeing 737 MAXs or 787 Dreamliners prior to issuing individual airworthiness certificates.

Boeing has not yet commented.

FAA extended for three years last week, in a first-reported decision by, a program allowing Boeing to carry out certain tasks on behalf of the agency like inspections. The FAA said that Boeing had improved.

Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg stated last week that the company is "pretty sure" it can increase its production of best-selling 737 MAX aircraft to 42 per month.

He said that after the FAA has approved Boeing's increase in output to 42 aircraft per month, "we have subsequent rate increases" in our plan. These will be typically in increments five aircraft each month and spaced at least six-months apart.

Boeing requested five years for the Organization Designation Authorization, but the agency decided to extend it to three instead of the five Boeing asked for in order to make sure the planemaker made "required improvement."

Congress adopted sweeping reforms on December 2020 regarding how the FAA certifies aircraft after two deadly 737 MAX crashes that killed 346 and caused the plane to be grounded for 20 months.

According to the Office of Inspector General, FAA officials sought in 2023 to allow Boeing’s ODA resume issuing final certificates of airworthiness for 737s and 787s. The Alaska mid-air crisis occurred before senior FAA officials could approve this request. (Reporting and editing by Franklin Paul, Marguerita Choy, and David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)