The American aerospace company Boeing has been synonymous with safe air travel for decades, but recent weeks have seen it plagued by a series of issues.
A piece of debris thought to belong to MH370 on display in 2019.
EPA/Fazry Ismail
It remains one of the biggest aviation mysteries – the tragic disappearance of passenger flight MH370. But a new, targeted search of the seabed could still yield answers.
A tragic plane crash has claimed at least 68 lives in Nepal – the latest in a string of aviation disasters in a country grappling with improving the safety of its flight industry.
Globally, 387 delivered and about 400 undelivered Boeing Max aircraft remain grounded indefinitely.
AAP/Mark Wagner
The Boeing MAX disaster has already cost the company billions of dollars and will have ripple effects on suppliers and the wider US economy, with tens of thousands of jobs at risk.
After the recent crash involving the Boeing 737, Air Canada has grounded the planes until July 1, 2019.
Darryl Dyck/CP
The fallout from Boeing grounding some of its aircraft amid safety concerns will hit both passengers and airlines. Be prepared for delays and higher fares.
Wreckage from the Ethiopia Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 that crashed en route to Nairobi.
EPA/STR
Suspending flights of the Boeing popular passenger aircraft that’s been involved in two deadly crashes is a prudent call given similarities in the two accidents.
The importance of check lists.
Shutterstock/lillolillo
An ultra-safe industry has important experience that could help a vulnerable new industry improve its safety.
International passengers at Ngurah Rai International Airport, Bali, Indonesia on November 29 th, 2017. Thousands of tourists were stranded and could not go home after Mt Agung volcano erupted.
Reuters/Johannes P. Christo
Until late November, Bali’s high economic dependence on tourism led its Tourism Board to dismiss the dangers of the Mount Agung volcano. This severely undermined the reputation of destination Bali..
Keeping its distance.
Sudpoth Sirirattanasakul/Shutterstock
Flying cars have been the stuff of science fiction for years, and now companies are now starting to look at such options. But what will it take to get our cars off the ground?
This week, US civil aviation safety regulator, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) took the massive step of grounding all US Boeing 787 Dreamliners. Its equivalent European counterpart, the European…