Audio By Carbonatix
United Airlines has blamed Boeing for a $200m (£161m) hit to its earnings in the first three months of this year.
The carrier was forced to ground its Boeing 737 MAX 9 fleet for three weeks after a mid-air cabin blowout on an Alaska Airlines flight in January.
United said that pushed it to a pre-tax loss of $164m for the first quarter.
The airline said it "would have reported a quarterly profit" otherwise.
However, the loss was smaller than Wall Street expected and United's shares rose by more than 5% after the announcement.
United has 79 Boeing 737 MAX 9s in its fleet, more than any of its rivals, and second only to Alaska Airlines.
United and Alaska were forced to cancel thousands of flights as inspections were carried out in January before the US aviation regulator cleared the planes to resume flying.
Earlier this month, Boeing paid $160m to Alaska to make up for losses the airline has suffered.
United told investors that its operations were also impacted by delays to deliveries of Boeing planes.
"We've adjusted our fleet plan to better reflect the reality of what the manufacturers are able to deliver," United's chief executive Scott Kirby said in a statement.
Boeing recently faced new pressure after a whistleblower reported safety concerns over the manufacturing of some of its planes to US regulators.
Engineer Sam Salehpour accused Boeing of taking shortcuts in the construction of its 787 and 777 jets.
He said he was "threatened with termination" after raising concerns with bosses.
But Boeing said the allegations were "inaccurate" and added it was confident its planes were safe.
Mr Salehpour is set to be the key witness at a US Senate hearing on 17 April.
On 5 January, a door plug on an Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 blew off shortly after take-off, terrifying passengers, and forcing an emergency return to the Portland, Oregon airport.
The latest incident raised fresh questions about the safety of Boeing's aircraft.
The company faced intense scrutiny after two fatal crashes of 737 Max 8 passenger jets in 2018 and 2019, which killed 346 people.
Latest Stories
-
Black Star International Film Festival appoints Aba Arthur as Diaspora Ambassador
5 minutes -
Opponents dazed by our support in Northern region – Bawumia Campaign denies coersion claim
19 minutes -
US to suspend visa processing for 75 nations, State Department says
25 minutes -
Prisons Service to produce sanitary pads, uniforms and furniture for schools
29 minutes -
AFROSON1C X storms Accra with sold-out show
33 minutes -
Ghana, Canada strengthen immigration cooperation as 2026 FIFA World Cup approaches
41 minutes -
US pulling some personnel from Qatar air base, official tells CBS
51 minutes -
Star Oil pays GH¢ 2.6 billion in taxes and levies for 2025
1 hour -
The Uncertainty of Precision: How VAR Mirrors the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle in Football
1 hour -
Paradigm Initiative condemns internet shutdown ahead of Uganda elections
1 hour -
Jospong’s sustainability drive deserves more spotlight nationally and internationally – Dr Gloria Kusi
2 hours -
Black Sherif gives 2025 a perfect score: “100 out of 100”
2 hours -
GIADEC, Metalloid and GIBDLC secure $60m facility to advance Nyinahin bauxite project
2 hours -
CAF Trophy Hunt: Win Samsung Galaxy Z Fold7, Xbox Series X, Apple iPad Air and other prizes in 1xBet promo!
2 hours -
Legacy leadership goes beyond profit – Rev Dr Sam Adeyemi
2 hours
