Southwest jockeys with
Norwegian for 737 Max launch title
26 JANUARY, 2017 - SOURCE: FLIGHTGLOBAL PRO - BY: EDWARD RUSSEL - WASHINGTON DC
Southwest Airlines chief executive Gary Kelly says the carrier will be the launch
customer of the Boeing 737 Max “regardless of when we take the first delivery”,
even as Norwegian prepares
to be the first operator.
Kelly cites the Dallas-based
carrier’s extensive involvement with Boeing on the development and testing of
the latest generation of the venerable narrowbody, as the rationale behind his
comment during a quarterly earnings call today.
Southwest is the launch customer
of the Max, placing the first order in December 2011. Norwegian placed its 737 Max order a month
later in January 2012.
Southwest reaffirms that it will
not debut the 737 Max 8 on scheduled flights until the end of the third
quarter, when all its 737-300 and -500 aircraft, or classics, are retired.
“We don’t really need [the 737
Max] for flying until October 1,” says Kelly.
Southwest will be at least the
second operator of the Max, with Norwegian confirming again today that it
plans to take delivery of its first 737 Max 8 in May and debut it on transatlantic
flights in June or July.
“Norwegian will now be the first
airline to take delivery of the 737 Max, and will be the first airline in the
world to operate this brand-new aircraft type,” a spokesman for Norwegian says.
The jockeying between Norwegian and Southwest sets up a race
between the two carriers to see who will take the first 737 Max, with the odds
likely on the latter due to its placing the first order and heavy involvement
in the programme.
Lion Air, Norwegian and Southwest are all scheduled to
take their first Max 8s in May, the Flight Fleets Analyzer shows. In addition, China Eastern Airlines, FlyDubai
and WestJet are scheduled to take their
first of the type before the end of September.
Norwegian plans to base at least its first
four Max aircraft in the USA, including at Newburgh’s Stewart International
airport near New York City. It will use the aircraft to open new point-to-point
routes across the Atlantic.
Norwegian has firm orders for 108 Max 8s
and Southwest has firm orders for 200 Max 7s and 8s, Fleets Analyzer shows.
Southwest anticipates a
20-aircraft net reduction in its fleet to 703 at the end of 2017, as it removes
the 87 737-300s that remained at the end of December.
The airline is scheduled to take 42 737-800s
and 14 Max 8s this year, Fleets Analyzer shows.
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