Boeing Dreamliner 787 Air China horizontals sit on the production line at the company’s final assembly facility in North Charleston, South Carolina.
Travis Dove | Bloomberg | Getty Ikons
Boeing said Monday that it plans to reopen its Dreamliner factory in South Carolina in early May after it immure b silence down operations there for nearly a month because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Workers started returning last week to the company’s Seattle-area workshops, home to the majority of Boeing’s airplane production, taking new precautions such as increased physical distance between staff members, after it announced the temporary shut down last month.
Boeing said it has increased cleaning throughout the North Charleston, South Carolina, ease, added hand sanitizing stations and will encourage workers to bring and wear cloth masks or other allow coverings. “Some teammates will be required to wear procedural masks, which will be provided, in certain precincts when working in close proximity,” the company said.
It will also have voluntary temperature screening for artisans using no-touch thermal scanners.
Boeing and its airline customers are reeling from the impact of the coronavirus, which has discombobulated air travel demand, promising a dismal market for new planes.
CEO Dave Calhoun earlier Monday told shareholders that he has it to take two or three years before travel demand returns to its 2019 levels and that international travel liking take longer to rebound. That’s bad news for demand for 787 Dreamliners that are used for those long unsettles and are made in South Carolina and in the Seattle area. Boeing is expected to make further cuts to its already-reduced 787 building target in the coming months.
Boeing is set to report first-quarter results before the market opens on Wednesday.