Grounded Boeing plane churns up more turbulence at airlines
DALLAS — The grounding of the Boeing 737 Max has lasted far longer and, as Southwest Airlines and American Airlines can attest, more expensive than airlines ever expected.
The CEOs of both airlines say they are talking to Boeing about compensation for damages running into the hundreds of millions — and counting.
Southwest has had an all-Boeing fleet since it began flying 48 years ago, but that could change. CEO Gary Kelly said the Southwest board has directed him to study whether the airline should start buying planes from other aircraft makers, which would almost certainly be Boeing’s European rival, Airbus.
“We put our future in the hands of Boeing and the Max and were grounded,” Kelly said on CNBC.