LONDON — European planemaker Airbus plans to show off its newest passenger jet with daily flight demonstrations during one of the world's biggest aviation trade fairs. But an ongoing safety and manufacturing crisis has rival Boeing keeping a lower profile at the Farnborough International Air Show.
The beleaguered American company isn't bringing any jetliners to take part in aerial displays at the event that kicks off Monday near London. Ahead of the show's opening, the company said it remained focused on satisfying the concerns of U.S. regulators and ''meeting our customer commitments'' rather than selling a lot of planes.
Chief Operating Officer Stephanie Pope said Boeing was focused on ''predictable deliveries'' of jets to airline customers, and getting production of its troubled 737 Max jets back up to 38 per month.
''This is transformational change. And you all know we have slowed down our factories pretty significantly to execute that change,'' Pope, who also serves as chief executive of Boeing's commercial airplanes division, told reporters Sunday.
The Farnsborough expo, held every other year in turn with the Paris Air Show, is traditionally a venue for aerospace companies to showcase their newest technological developments and for manufacturers to trumpet a flurry of orders for new passenger, cargo and military aircraft. Organizers expect about 1,500 exhibitors from 42 countries and 80,000 visitors during the weeklong event.
Boeing's subdued presence at this year's show underscores its continuing woes.
Boeing Global President Brendan Nelson said in a news release that the company has ''reduced our commercial airplanes display and flight demonstrations at the show, and will focus on new technology, sustainability, security and services solutions.''
The company has been reeling since a door plug blew out of an Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 during a flight at the start of the year, rekindling safety fears that were subsiding after two crashes of Max jets in 2018 and 2019 killed 346 people in Indonesia and Ethiopia.