Transport Minister closes skies to Max 8 (Canada)
Boeing's 737 Max 8 to undergo further testing to
satisfy safety concerns.
OTTAWA - Transport Minister Marc Garneau says
Boeing's Max 8 aircraft won't be allowed to fly in Canadian skies until
officials believe all safety concerns have been addressed.
He said in a
statement Friday that Transport Canada will work with its American, European and
Brazilian counterparts before giving the aircraft a stamp of
approval.
Transport Canada officials took part in test flights of the 737
Max 8 aircraft in recent days and are analyzing the results before giving the
thumbs-up to proposed changes to the aircraft.
Now, the plane will be
further tested in Vancouver starting Sept. 7 under an agreement between Boeing,
the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and Europe's aviation safety
regulator.
With a new round of test flights about to start, Garneau said
he still expects the FAA and the company to prove the aircraft is
safe.
Canada closed its skies to the Boeing aircraft after an Ethiopian
Airlines flight crashed in March 2019, killing all 157 people on board,
including 18 Canadians.
The crash, six minutes after takeoff from Addis
Ababa, was eerily similar to one five months earlier when a Lion Air flight went
down after takeoff from Jakarta, Indonesia.
"Transport Canada will not
lift the flight restrictions on the Boeing 737 MAX 8 until the department is
fully satisfied that all safety concerns have been addressed by the manufacturer
and the FAA, and that enhanced flight crew procedures and training are in
place," Garneau said.
From Sunday to Tuesday this week, a Transport
Canada test crew were flown daily between Seattle and Vancouver to evaluate the
engineering simulator at the Boeing facility. Test flights over American
airspace then took place on Wednesday and Thursday.
Transport Canada said
that mitigation measures were put in place to prevent the crew from contracting
the novel coronavirus which causes COVID-19.
Officials are analyzing the
results and expect to complete their review this fall, at which time they'll
work with international counterparts to set minimum training requirements for
the Max 8 to return to service.
The loss of the plane last year forced
Air Canada and WestJet to cancel some routes and lease less fuel-efficient
aircraft. Boeing also said it was putting a halt on production.
The EU
Aviation Safety Agency said Thursday that Boeing still has some final issues to
deal with on the aircraft, but the plane was ready for flight tests needed
before the European body could approve the aircraft's new design.
It said
the COVID-19 pandemic threw a wrench into testing plans because of travel
restrictions between the United States and Europe, which were resolved by
holding test flights in Vancouver.
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