Second Boeing jet starts return from China, tracker shows

Amid escalating trade tensions between the U.S. and China, two Boeing 737 MAX jets, initially destined for Chinese airlines, are being returned to the United States. This reversal highlights the disruption to aircraft deliveries due to newly impos...

Representative image.
A second Boeing jet intended for use by a Chinese airline was heading back to the U.S. on Monday, flight tracking data showed, in what appears to be another victim of the tit-for-tat bilateral tariffs launched by President Donald Trump in his global trade offensive.

The 737 MAX took off from Boeing's Zhoushan completion center near Shanghai on Monday morning and was heading towards the U.S. territory of Guam, data from flight tracking website AirNav Radar showed.

Guam is one of the stops such flights make on the 5,000-mile (8,000-km) journey across the Pacific between Boeing's U.S. production hub in Seattle and the Zhoushan completion center, where planes are ferried by Boeing for final work and delivery to a Chinese carrier.


On Sunday a 737 MAX painted with the livery for China's Xiamen Airlines made the return journey from Zhoushan and landed at Seattle's Boeing Field.

It is not clear which party made the decision for the two aircraft to return to the U.S.

Trump this month raised baseline tariffs on Chinese imports to 145%. In retaliation, China has imposed a 125% tariff on U.S. goods. A Chinese airline taking delivery of a Boeing jet could be crippled by the tariffs, given that a new 737 MAX has a market value of around $55 million, according to IBA, an aviation consultancy.
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The plane flew from Seattle to Zhoushan just under a month ago.

Boeing did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The return of the 737 MAX jets, Boeing's best-selling model, is the latest sign of disruption to new aircraft deliveries from a breakdown in the aerospace industry's decades-old duty-free status.

The tariff war and apparent U-turn over deliveries comes as Boeing has been recovering from an almost five-year import freeze on 737 MAX jets and a previous round of trade tensions.
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Confusion over changing tariffs could leave many aircraft deliveries in limbo, with some airline CEOs saying they would defer delivery of planes rather than pay duties, analysts say.
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