India, Boeing and Plane Crash
Digest more
Top News
Impacts
Measures
A British Airways flight to Chennai, India, entered a series of holding patterns to dump fuel before returning to London's Heathrow Airport.
Boeing stock strongly outperformed the S&P 500 in 2024 driven by robust airplane orders and improving production stability. Learn more on BA stock here.
Boeing Co. said it’s made more progress in the past four to five months on the long-delayed new presidential aircraft than at any point in the last four years as it identifies ways to streamline the complex program.
Investigators recover cockpit voice recorder from crashed Air India flight - The voice recorder will be key to determining cause of one of the worst aviation disasters in decades
Meanwhile, Boeing executives are expected to brief media on the company’s latest 20-year Commercial Market Outlook which predicts demand for 43,600 new aircraft over the next two decades.
An Air India flight was forced to turn around and return to Hong Kong after an unspecified technical issue was discovered with the aircraft. The Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner— the same craft involved in last week’s devastating crash in Ahmedabad which killed 270 people—was an hour into a flight to New Delhi when the pilot suspected a problem and turned around.
Even as its troubles refuse to die down, aviation giant Boeing Co. remains optimistic about the future and continues to bet on a surge in global air travel over the next two decades.
LE BOURGET— Boeing Defense and Space CEO Steve Parker defended the U.S. defense industry’s ability to launch development of a second sixth-generation fighter in a June 16 news conference, contradicting concerns voiced June 12 by the Navy’s leader.
Stephanie Pope met Air India Chairman N Chandrasekaran at the airline's headquarters in Gurugram, near New Delhi airport.
The crash happened just weeks after the company cut a deal with the U.S. government to avoid taking criminal responsibility for a pair of deadly crashes in 2018 and 2019.
6h
Stocktwits on MSNBoeing Slightly Cuts 20-Year Aircraft Demand Forecast, But Says ‘Resilience Will Remain A Hallmark’ Of Airlines IndustryBoeing (BA) now expects worldwide demand for 43,600 additional commercial airplanes over the next 20 years, slightly lower than its earlier forecast. The planemaker expects passenger traffic to grow at a rate of 4.