Stoush breaks out between Emirates and Boeing over multi-billion dollar aircraft order

The Boeing 777X is already two years late.
The Boeing 777X is already two years late. Photo credit: Getty Images

The head of Dubai airline Emirates has piled pressure on planemaker Boeing over delays to its 777X jetliner, warning that the uncertainty would cause significant disruption to one of the world's biggest carriers.

Emirates President Tim Clark said he wanted "another grown-up conversation" with the U.S. planemaker over the timing of the twin-engined jumbo, which is running at least two and a half years behind its originally planned arrival of June 2020.

"We work to precision. I struggle with others who can't get that," Clark told reporters shortly before he was due to meet Boeing leaders on the sidelines of an airline industry summit.

Clark, an airline industry veteran who was closely involved in the development of the current 777-300ER model, has lambasted Boeing this year over repeated delays to its 777X.

Boeing had no immediate comment when contacted by Reuters.

The company has previously said it plans to start delivering the new, larger version of the 777 wide-body jet by late 2023, three years later than originally planned, partly owing to a longer certification process after fatal 737 MAX jet crashes.

Clark, who is taking part in an International Air Transport Association meeting in Boston, emphasised that the uncertainty over Boeing's progress with the programme would hamper his airline's complex fleet plans.

Emirates, which has 126 777X jets on order, is a launch customer for the new aircraft that will replace the current 777 jets that are the backbone of its wide-body fleet.

Clark said Emirates still did not know when the first 777-9 version of the twin-engine jumbo would arrive, nor whether the smaller 777-8 version would be built at all.

In May Clark said that Emirates would refuse delivery of 777X jets that did not meet contractual agreements. On Tuesday he said he would like industry contracts to be altered to make manufacturers more liable for the knock-on effects of delays.

Currently manufacturers are liable for product defects, not indirect "consequential damages" such as passenger compensation.

In April the airline's chairman said that some of the 126 777X jets ordered could be swapped for smaller Boeing 787 Dreamliners. 

Emirates has already revised its order for the 777X in 2019, cancelling orders for 24 of the jets as part of a deal that saw it agree to buy 30 Dreamliners.