grounded at
Shenzhen Bao'an International Airport in March 2019 March 11 • China: The
Civil Aviation Administration of China ordered all domestic airlines to suspend operations of all 737 MAX 8 aircraft by 18:00 local time (10:00 GMT), pending the results of the investigation, thus grounding all 96 Boeing 737 MAX planes (c. 25% of all delivered) in China. • United States: The FAA issued an affirmation of the continued airworthiness of the 737 MAX. The FAA stated that it had no evidence from the crashes to justify regulatory action against the aircraft. • Indonesia: Nine hours after China's grounding, the
Indonesian Ministry of Transportation issued a temporary suspension on the operation of all eleven 737 MAX 8 aircraft in Indonesia. A nationwide inspection on the type was expected to take place on March 12 to "ensure that aircraft operating in Indonesia are in an airworthy condition". • Mongolia:
Civil Aviation Authority of Mongolia (MCAA) said in a statement "MCAA has temporarily stopped the 737 MAX flight operated by
MIAT Mongolian Airlines from March 11, 2019." March 12 • Singapore: the
Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore, "temporarily suspends" operation of all variants of the 737 MAX aircraft into and out of Singapore. • India:
Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) released a statement "DGCA has taken the decision to ground the 737 MAX aircraft immediately, pursuant to new inspections. • Turkey:
Directorate General of Civil Aviation suspended flights of 737 MAX 8 and 9 type aircraft being operated by Turkish companies in Turkey, and stated that they are also reviewing the possibility of closing the country's airspace for the same. • South Korea:
Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport (MOLIT) advised
Eastar Jet, the only airline of South Korea to possess Boeing 737 MAX aircraft to ground their models, and three days later issued a NOTAM (Notice to Airmen) message to block all Boeing 737 MAX models from landing and departing from all domestic airports. • European Union: The
European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) suspended all flight operations of all 737-8 MAX and 737-9 MAX in the European Union. In addition, EASA published a Safety Directive, published at 18:23, • Canada:
Minister of Transport Marc Garneau said it was premature to consider groundings and that, "If I had to fly somewhere on that type of aircraft today, I would." • Australia: The
Civil Aviation Safety Authority banned Boeing 737 MAX from Australian airspace. • Malaysia: The
Civil Aviation Authority of Malaysia suspended the operations of the Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft flying to or from Malaysia and transiting in Malaysia. March 13 • Canada:
Minister of Transport Marc Garneau, prompted by receipt of new information, said "There can't be any MAX 8 or MAX 9 flying into, out of or across Canada", effectively grounding all 737 MAX aircraft in Canadian airspace. • United States:
President Donald Trump announced on March 13, that United States authorities would ground all 737 MAX 8 and MAX 9 aircraft in the United States. After the President's announcement, the FAA officially ordered the grounding of all 737 MAX 8 and 9 operated by U.S. airlines or in the United States airspace. The FAA did allow airlines to make ferry flights without passengers or flight attendants in order to reposition the aircraft in central locations. • Hong Kong: The
Civil Aviation Department banned the operation of all 737 MAX aircraft into, out of and over Hong Kong. • Panama: The
Civil Aviation Authority grounded its aircraft. • Vietnam: The
Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam banned Boeing 737 MAX aircraft from flying over Vietnam. • New Zealand: The
Civil Aviation Authority of New Zealand suspended Boeing 737 MAX aircraft from its airspace. • Mexico: Mexico's civil aviation authority suspended flights by Boeing 737 MAX 8 and MAX 9 aircraft in and out of the country. • Brazil: The
National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC) suspended the 737 MAX 8 aircraft from flying. • Colombia: Colombia's civil aviation authority banned Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes from flying over its airspace. • Chile: The
Directorate General of Civil Aviation banned Boeing 737 MAX 8 flights in the country's airspace. • Trinidad and Tobago: The Director General of Civil Aviation banned Boeing 737 MAX 8 and 9 planes from use in civil aviation operations within and over Trinidad and Tobago. March 14 • Taiwan: The
Civil Aeronautics Administration banned Boeing 737 MAX from entering, leaving or flying over Taiwan. • Japan: Japan's transport ministry banned flights by Boeing 737 MAX 8 and 9 aircraft from its airspace. March 16 • Argentina: The
National Civil Aviation Administration (ANAC) closed airspace to Boeing 737 MAX flights. June 27 • Belgium issued a
NOTAM extending the 737 MAX 8 and MAX 9 ban until 2020. == Airlines ==