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Photos taken at a Boeing partner factory in Wichita, Kansas shows the growing number of uncompleted 737 Max planes that are backlogged on the planemaker's production line now that the company has announced it will be suspending production of the controversial airplane model.
These planes are now sitting idle since its grounding has hit the nine-month mark. Boeing claims it now has about 400 planes in storage.
"This decision is driven by a number of factors, including the extension of certification into 2020, the uncertainty about the timing and conditions of return to service and global training approvals, and the importance of ensuring that we can prioritize the delivery of stored aircraft," Boeing said in a statement.
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Boeing has about 680 suppliers and hundreds of other subcontractors working to create the 737 Max. While the company doesn't have plans to layoff any of its own employees, there is fear that furloughs will begin with the suppliers that Boeing may stop paying, Reuters reported.
This includes Spirit AeroSystems, which had enough factory workers to create 52 plane fuselages per month, and counting, prior to the 737 Max groundings. Spirit is one of the largest 737 Max suppliers.
Keep scrolling to see the grounded planes and what the effects of the production halt may have on Boeing's suppliers and the US economy:
"The potential loss of talent, access to capital and incremental risk on the supply chain all create substantial uncertainty about Boeing's ability to increase production levels once the pause ends," Canaccord Genuity analyst Ken Herbert told Reuters.
"As we have throughout the 737 Max grounding, we will keep our customers, employees, and supply chain top of mind as we continue to assess appropriate actions," Boeing said in a statement.
“This will include efforts to sustain the gains in production system and supply chain quality and health made over the last many months,” it continued.
President Trump reportedly called Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg on Sunday to discuss the production halt and state of the company, the New York Times reported.
The Federal Aviation Administration's analysis discovered that without its intervention and the halting of 737 Max services, the plane would likely crash another 15 times over the course of 30 to 45 years, the Wall Street Journal reported.