Investigators have identified a Malaysian plant operated by Boeing supplier Boeing AeroSystems as the source of the defective door plug on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282. Shelby Tauber – Bloomberg/Getty Images
Investigators I gushed To find out why part of the fuselage was torn off from Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 on January 5. The National Transportation Security Board revealed one of its findings on Wednesday — though that doesn't make getting more answers any easier.
A factory in Malaysia, operated by Boeing supplier Spirit AeroSystems, manufactured a defective door plug on the 737 Max 9 plane involved in the crash. Announce NTSB Chairman Jennifer Homendy on Wednesday. (Door plugs replace unnecessary emergency exit doors.) That means the failure could happen anywhere between Malaysia, Spirit's facility in Wichita, or a Boeing plant near Seattle.
“We have no indication right now as to where this will happen in this process,” Homendy told reporters after a Senate hearing. Wall Street Journal. “This could be anywhere along the line,” she said, adding that the NTSB was not focused solely on manufacturing.
Boeing has getting help from external sources Much of its manufacturing goes to outside suppliers like Spirit, which has built sprawling global supply chains, including countries like Malaysia.
The Southeast Asian country is the region's second-largest aviation hub, and the industry there generated $3.4 billion in revenue in 2019, according to documents From the Malaysian Investment Development Authority. Suppliers based in Malaysia work with both major aircraft manufacturers, Boeing and Airbus.
Spirit has a factory in Subang, near Kuala Lumpur, the country's capital. The Boeing supplier opened the 242,000-square-foot facility in 2009.
“Although Spirit is an airline, it is also a people company, and it was the people in Malaysia that convinced me that this was a great place for Spirit to grow globally,” said Jeff Turner, then CEO of Spirit. He said at the time.
In addition to Malaysia and the United States, Spirit It also has facilities In the United Kingdom, France and Morocco.
The spirit did not respond Luck Request to comment outside US business hours. A company spokesperson confirmed to Associated Press The plug is made in Malaysia.
A Boeing spokesman said the company would check with Spirit for more information about the origin of the door plug.
“It will get better”
Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun pledged to deepen cooperation between his company and Spirit. “We're going to get better,” Calhoun said. City Hall At Spirit headquarters in Wichita. He added that Boeing and Spirit engineers, mechanics and engineers “will speak the same language on this matter in every way and form.”
Both Boeing and Spirit are still reeling from the Alaska Airlines incident.
About 170 planes, most of them belonging to Alaska Airlines and United Airlines, are still grounded. Waiting for inspection instructions From Boeing and the Federal Aviation Administration. On Wednesday, FAA officials said they had done just that Inspection of 40 aircraft Similar to the one involved in the Alaska Airlines flight.
Boeing shares have fallen 18% since January 5, the date of the Alaska Airlines incident. Spirit shares fell 15% over the same period.
Boeing's return to Asia
This incident complicates Boeing's return to Asia, specifically to China. At one time, China was one of Boeing's most promising markets, thanks to the country's booming aviation sector. But Chinese officials froze Boeing aircraft orders in 2019, following two fatal crashes of the 737 MAX 8.
Boeing is tiptoeing back into the market, with the manufacturer delivering its first plane in more than four years to a Chinese airline. Last December.
But now, Chinese regulators and airlines are conducting additional checks on Boeing planes in the wake of the Alaska Airlines incident Wall Street Journal I reported earlier this week. (The aircraft being examined are not 737 MAX 9)
Other airlines are working to fill the gap left by Boeing's absence. Chinese airlines switch to Airbus A320 series during Boeing grounding: There were more than a thousand A320s operating in China by the end of 2022, compared with just over 940 Boeing 737s, according to Bloomberg. China also has a domestic competitor to the 737: the C919, made by state-owned COMAC.