FAA says Boeing has not completed work needed for MAX 7 approval

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Boeing 737 MAX 7 aircraft

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) told Boeing it has not completed safety tasks needed in order to certify the 737 MAX 7 by December 2022

According to a letter from the FAA dated September 19, 2022, seen by Reuters, the FAA shared concerns “about realistic timeframes for receiving the remaining documents” required to certify the aircraft.

The regulator had urged Boeing to submit the necessary system safety assessments (SSAs) by mid-September in order for the aircraft to be certified by December. However, the manufacturer has failed to meet the submission deadline.

“Just under 10% of the SSAs [system safety assessments, ed.-] have been accepted by the FAA and another 70% of these documents are in various stages of review and revision,” the FAA said in the letter.

“The most concerning, however, is that Boeing has yet to provide an initial submittal for six of the outstanding SSAs,” the FAA added, outlining that it will take time for the authority to review crucial safety-related documents.

The current deadline to win approval from the FAA of the 737 MAX 7 10 and the MAX 7, the smallest aircraft in the MAX family, is December 31, 2022. If the manufacturer fails to meet the deadline, it will need to equip both variants with a modernized flight crew alerting system to meet additional safety requirements as per the new Aircraft Certification, Safety and Accountability Act (ACSAA), which will be implemented on January 1, 2023.

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