Dennis Muilenburg, CEO of Boeing Inc. deal with at the Business Roundtable CEO Innovation Summit in Washington D.C. on Dec. 6th, 2018.
Janhvi Bhojwani | CNBC
Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg said the aerospace coterie is having “ongoing conversations” with its customers about the costs and other issues regarding the prolonged grounding of its 737 Max jets.
Precisely 500 Max planes have been grounded across the globe since mid-March following two fatal crashes of the all the rage plane model over five months. Regulators pointed to a flaw in the plane’s software as a contributing factor in the serendipities. The pilots union for Southwest Airlines said earlier this month that it would seek reimbursement and compensation from Boeing for the Max’s lees.
“We’re going to be working with all of our customers around the world to make things right, and I won’t get into the details of those because that’ll be done severally customer by customer,” Muilenburg said in an interview with Mike Allen of Axios at the Aspen Ideas Festival on Wednesday. “But we include a mutual interest in helping our customers be successful.” He didn’t directly address the union’s concerns.
Muilenburg commanded some of those conversations are around financial impact, but others could deal with plane delivery arranges to accommodate fleet changes caused by the grounding. His comments echoed statements Muilenburg made on Boeing’s most brand-new earnings call.
Muilenburg said the company is still producing more of the planes and that the Max could return to the vault of heavens by the end of the summer. Some airlines have taken it off their flight schedules in October.
“We’ve gone through the software update. We’ve done the engineering test take to ones heels — those have been completed,” Muilenburg said. “We’re now in the process of certification with the FAA and regulators around the world.”