SEATTLE: A Boeing jet supposed to be used by a Chinese language airline landed again on the planemaker’s US manufacturing hub on Sunday (Apr 20), a sufferer of the tit-for-tat bilateral tariffs launched by President Donald Trump in his international commerce offensive.
The 737 MAX, which was meant for China’s Xiamen Airways, landed at Seattle’s Boeing Discipline at 6.11pm (Sunday, 9.11am, Singapore time), in line with a Reuters witness. It was painted with Xiamen livery.
The jet, which made refueling stops in Guam and Hawaii on its 8,000km return journey, was certainly one of a number of 737 MAX jets ready at Boeing’s Zhoushan completion centre for ultimate work and supply to a Chinese language provider.
Trump this month raised baseline tariffs on Chinese language imports to 145 per cent. In retaliation, China has imposed a 125 per cent tariff on US items. A Chinese language airline taking supply of a Boeing jet might be crippled by the tariffs, given {that a} new 737 MAX has a market worth of round US$55 million, in line with IBA, an aviation consultancy.
It’s not clear which occasion made the choice for the plane to return to the US Boeing didn’t instantly reply to request for remark. Xiamen didn’t reply to request for remark.
The return of the 737 MAX, Boeing’s best-selling mannequin, is the newest signal of disruption to new plane deliveries from a breakdown within the aerospace trade’s decades-old duty-free standing.
The tariff warfare and obvious U-turn over deliveries comes as Boeing has been recovering from an virtually five-year import freeze on 737 MAX jets and a earlier spherical of commerce tensions.
Confusion over altering tariffs might go away many plane deliveries in limbo, with some airline CEOs saying they’d defer supply of planes quite than pay duties, analysts say.
