Audio By Carbonatix
Boeing has said it will stop making its classic 747 plane and is eyeing steeper job cuts than those it has previously announced.
The firm is also planning to slow production of many of its jets, including the troubled 737 Max.
The changes come as the firm disclosed a $2.4bn (£1.8bn) loss as the virus depressed demand for air travel.
"The reality is the pandemic's impact on the aviation sector continues to be severe," said Boeing boss Dave Calhoun.
Airlines around the world have responded to the coronavirus pandemic by reducing their fleets and delaying or cancelling aircraft orders.
This month British Airways became the latest to say it was retiring all of its 747 jets - about 10% of its fleet - citing the fall in passenger demand. Australian airline Qantas has also retired the jet, which marked its 50th anniversary last year.
Boeing said the slowdown may mean deeper job cuts on top of roughly 16,000 layoffs - around 10% of its workforce - it has already planned.
"Our government services, defence and space programs provide some critical stability for us in the near-term as we take tough but necessary steps to adapt for new market realities," Mr Calhoun said.
"We are taking the right action to ensure we're well positioned for the future."
The pandemic has exacerbated the crisis facing Boeing, which was already in trouble following two fatal crashes of its 737 Max plane which killed 346 people.
The jet has been grounded since last March, costing the company some $20bn. The scandal led to the departure of top executives and a string of ongoing investigations.
Boeing said it has re-started production of the 737, but it expects the rate of manufacturing to remain low for the foreseeable future as the virus weighs on the industry.
It said it hoped to be making 31 per month by the beginning of 2022 - instead of during 2021 as planned. That would be roughly half the rate of the firm's production before the grounding.

"While there have been some encouraging signs, we estimate it will take around three years to return to 2019 passenger levels," Boeing said.
Falling sales
Boeing said it lost $2.4bn in the three months to 30 June, as sales fell 25% to $11.8bn.
Last year, it reported a $2.9bn loss in the same quarter, driven by a charge of more than $5bn related to the grounding of the 737 Max.
The sales decline was driven by its commercial unit, which serves passenger airlines. Revenue dropped 65% as the firm delivered just 20 planes in the quarter, compared to 90 a year ago.
Sales in the firm's defence, space and security unit were essentially flat at $6.5bn.
Latest Stories
-
Lands Minister commissions 3rd batch of 636 Blue Water Guards; pledges sustained fight against galamsey
12 minutes -
Manso Nyankomase miners allege military extortion and harassment during reclamation exercise
17 minutes -
Ghanaian among 20 arrested as 306 stolen vehicles recovered in Canada
33 minutes -
Neither Russia nor France: One West African country walks a diplomatic tightrope
50 minutes -
Former CSA boss says he was politically insulated to do his job
1 hour -
NAPO slams gov’t for revocation of renamed universities
1 hour -
Playback: The Law discussed legal backbone of Ghana’s cybersecurity framework
2 hours -
Photos: 2025 Diaspora Summit
2 hours -
Diaspora partnership central to Ghana’s reset agenda – Vice President Â
2 hours -
Ghanaian graduate students in U.S. appeal for financial support to complete studies
2 hours -
Four suspects arrested in fatal kidnapping attempt near Chereponi
4 hours -
Sankofa Pan-African Committee honours Temple of Rabbi leader as ‘Custodian of Peace’
4 hours -
Obuasi Trade Show records high turn-out and strong impact
4 hours -
‘Obroni wawu’ – The paradise of waste: Where Charity becomes a curse
4 hours -
38 arrested in intelligence-led police operations across parts of Tema Region
4 hours
