The US air safety regulator announced it was grounding some Boeing 737 MAX 9 airplanes pending inspections, a day after a panel blew out of one of the planes over the western state of Oregon.
The Federal Aviation Administration "is requiring immediate inspections of certain Boeing 737 MAX 9 planes before they can return to flight," the agency said on X, the former Twitter.
The agency said around 171 aircraft worldwide would be affected, with each inspection taking four to eight hours.
"Safety will continue to drive our decision-making," the FAA statement said.
Boeing has so far delivered some 218 737 MAX 9 planes worldwide, the company told AFP.
US-based Alaska Airlines grounded all 65 of its Boeing 737 MAX 9 planes on Friday after a flight carrying 171 passengers and six crew was forced to make an emergency landing, with passengers saying a window panel blew out after takeoff.
Alaska Flight 1282 had departed from Portland International Airport and was still gaining altitude when the cabin crew reported a "pressurization issue," according to the FAA.
The plane quickly returned to Portland and there were no major injuries.
Images posted on social media showed a side panel of the plane blown out, with emergency oxygen masks hanging from the ceiling.
"Following tonight's event on Flight 1282, we have decided to take the precautionary step of temporarily grounding our fleet of 65 Boeing 737-9 aircraft," Alaska Airlines CEO Ben Minicucci said in a statement Friday.
"Each aircraft will be returned to service only after completion of full main tenance and safety inspections," he said.
Passenger Kyle Rinker told CNN a window popped off soon after takeoff.
"It was really abrupt. Just got to altitude, and the window/wall just popped off," he told the broadcaster.
The Oregonian newspaper quoted passengers as saying no one was sitting in the seat next to the panel, but that a young boy in the middle seat had his shirt ripped off by the sudden decompression, injuring him slightly.
Another passenger, Vi Nguyen, told The New York Times that a loud noise during the flight had woken her.
"I open up my eyes and the first thing I see is the oxygen mask right in front of me," Nguyen told the newspaper. "And I look to the left and the wall on the side of the plane is gone."
"The first thing I thought was, 'I'm going to die,'" she added.
'Rare occurrence'
Aviation specialist John Ostrower, of the Air Current website, said the affected panel is actually a "mid-aft door," which, for some carriers, Boeing deactivates before delivering the new planes.
To passengers, the panel would appear like a normal window, he said.
The National Transportation Safety Board dispatched a team to Portland to examine the craft. FAA and Alaska Airlines said they were also investigating.
"While this type of occurrence is rare," the airline said in an earlier statement, "our flight crew was trained and prepared to safely manage the situation."
Alaska Airlines said Saturday that more than a fourth of its Max 9 fleet had been inspected since the incident, with nothing noteworthy being found.
The plane, which had been headed to Ontario, California, was certified airworthy in October and was newly delivered to Alaska Airlines, according to the FAA registry website.
Boeing has struggled in recent years with technical and quality control issues related to its 737 MAX models.
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Source: TRT