Updated On: 25 November, 2020 08:19 AM IST | Berlin | Agencies
I am confident that we have left no stone unturned in our assessment of the aircraft with its changed design approach, said EASA Executive Director Patrick Ky in a statement

Workers near a Boeing 737 MAX flight at Renton Airport. Pic/AFP
European regulators on Tuesday took a step closer to letting the Boeing 737 Max fly again, publishing a proposed airworthiness directive that could see the aircraft cleared within weeks after being grounded for nearly two years over deadly crashes.
The publication of the directive by the European Union Aviation Safety Agency opens a 28-day public consultation period after which the agency will review the input and then approve the aircraft for flight.