<p>Dozens of Boeing 777 planes were grounded worldwide Monday following a weekend scare on a United Airlines' plane that suffered engine failure and scattered airplane debris over suburban Denver.</p>.<p>The incident on the flight out of Denver -- which quickly returned to the airport after part of the engine caught fire and broke off -- prompted United and other airlines to ground planes with the same Pratt & Whitney engine.</p>.<p>While no one was injured in the Denver incident, the episode is the latest setback for Boeing, which only recently resumed deliveries of the long-grounded 737 MAX following two fatal crashes of that plane.</p>.<p>Aviation experts said the incident especially raised questions about Pratt & Whitney and United over engine maintenance.</p>.<p>"It's nothing like the MAX," said Teal Group aviation analyst Richard Aboulafia. "After all these years of service it is unlikely to be a design issue with the engine, certainly it is something to do with maintenance."</p>.<p>The Denver incident followed a Japan Airlines 777 incident in December involving the same type of engine, as well as an engine problem in February 2018 on a United flight.</p>.<p>"There might be a common theme" among the three incidents "but until the investigation is complete, we don't know that," said Scott Hamilton of Leeham News, an aviation news site.</p>.<p>Boeing said all 128 of the 777s with Pratt & Whitney engines were grounded following Saturday's emergency landing of United flight 328 to Hawaii.</p>.<p>Of the 128 planes, only 69 were in service while 59 were in storage.</p>.<p>Besides United, which removed 24 planes from service, affected carriers included Japanese carriers, Japan Airlines and All Nippon and South Korean airlines, Asiana and Korean Air.</p>.<p>Egyptian state newspaper Al Ahram reported Monday that national carrier Egyptair is grounding four planes with this type of engine.</p>.<p>British Transport Secretary Grant Shapps announced a temporary ban on jets with Pratt & Whitney 4000-112 series engines from entering UK airspace.</p>.<p>A video shot from inside the United aircraft -- which had 231 passengers and 10 crew on board -- showed the right engine ablaze and wobbling on the wing of the Boeing 777-200.</p>.<p>Residents in the Denver suburb of Broomfield found large pieces of the plane scattered around their community.</p>.<p>The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has ordered extra inspections after the incident.</p>.<p>FAA chief Steve Dickson said a preliminary safety data review pointed to a need for additional checks of the jet engine's fan blades, which were unique to the model and only used on 777 planes.</p>.<p>Officials from the FAA met with Pratt & Whitney and Boeing representatives on Sunday evening, he added.</p>.<p>The US National Transportation and Safety Board (NTSB) said a preliminary investigation indicated two fan blades fractured on the number 2 engine on the plan.</p>.<p>"The airplane sustained minor damage," the NTSB said in a statement Sunday. "The examination and documentation of the airplane is ongoing."</p>.<p>Pratt & Whitney said it was cooperating with the NTSB probe and "will continue to work to ensure the safe operation of the fleet."</p>.<p>(The NTSB said the flight had 229 passengers, but United confirmed there were 231.)</p>.<p>United said Sunday it was removing the aircraft from its schedule, "and will continue to work closely with regulators to determine any additional steps."</p>.<p>Japan's transport ministry earlier said it had ordered stricter inspections of engines after a Japan Airlines 777 plane flying from Haneda to Naha experienced trouble with "an engine in the same family" in December.</p>.<p>The engine failure is unwelcome news for Boeing, which also faces a fresh investigation in Holland after a Boeing 747-400 cargo plane showered a small town Meerssen with debris injuring two people -- the same day as the Denver incident.</p>.<p>"We have started a preliminary investigation," said Luisa Hubregtse of the Dutch Safety Board, the organisation responsible for looking into aviation incidents.</p>.<p>"However, at this stage it's too early to draw any conclusions," she told AFP.</p>.<p>Boeing only recently resumed deliveries of the 737 MAX following a 20-month global grounding after two tragic crashes killed 346 people.</p>.<p>The MAX began returning to commercial service in late 2020, a time when airline travel remains depressed due to the coronavirus pandemic.</p>.<p>Boeing executives said last month they expect it will take about three years for activity to return to pre-pandemic levels.</p>.<p>Michel Merluzeau, an expert at consultancy AIR, agreed the latest problem did not appear to result from poor plane design by the aerospace giant.</p>.<p>"It's not really a problem for Boeing," he said. "It's more an issue of maintenance -- how United or Pratt & Whitney is maintaining engines that have been in use for a while."</p>.<p>Hamilton of Leeham News said the episode "is an embarrassing headline, but as a practical issue, it will have no impact on Boeing."</p>.<p>Noting the weak demand for longer-service planes during Covid-19, Hamilton predicted some of the carriers could opt to retire the planes rather than return them to service.</p>.<p>Shares of Boeing fell 2.1 percent to $212.88, while Pratt & Whitney's parent company Raytheon Technologies fell 1.7 percent to $73.00.</p>.<p>United rose 3.5 percent to $49.70, joining other carriers in rallying after a positive note from Deutsche Bank about the industry's prospects amid improving Covid-19 trends.</p>
<p>Dozens of Boeing 777 planes were grounded worldwide Monday following a weekend scare on a United Airlines' plane that suffered engine failure and scattered airplane debris over suburban Denver.</p>.<p>The incident on the flight out of Denver -- which quickly returned to the airport after part of the engine caught fire and broke off -- prompted United and other airlines to ground planes with the same Pratt & Whitney engine.</p>.<p>While no one was injured in the Denver incident, the episode is the latest setback for Boeing, which only recently resumed deliveries of the long-grounded 737 MAX following two fatal crashes of that plane.</p>.<p>Aviation experts said the incident especially raised questions about Pratt & Whitney and United over engine maintenance.</p>.<p>"It's nothing like the MAX," said Teal Group aviation analyst Richard Aboulafia. "After all these years of service it is unlikely to be a design issue with the engine, certainly it is something to do with maintenance."</p>.<p>The Denver incident followed a Japan Airlines 777 incident in December involving the same type of engine, as well as an engine problem in February 2018 on a United flight.</p>.<p>"There might be a common theme" among the three incidents "but until the investigation is complete, we don't know that," said Scott Hamilton of Leeham News, an aviation news site.</p>.<p>Boeing said all 128 of the 777s with Pratt & Whitney engines were grounded following Saturday's emergency landing of United flight 328 to Hawaii.</p>.<p>Of the 128 planes, only 69 were in service while 59 were in storage.</p>.<p>Besides United, which removed 24 planes from service, affected carriers included Japanese carriers, Japan Airlines and All Nippon and South Korean airlines, Asiana and Korean Air.</p>.<p>Egyptian state newspaper Al Ahram reported Monday that national carrier Egyptair is grounding four planes with this type of engine.</p>.<p>British Transport Secretary Grant Shapps announced a temporary ban on jets with Pratt & Whitney 4000-112 series engines from entering UK airspace.</p>.<p>A video shot from inside the United aircraft -- which had 231 passengers and 10 crew on board -- showed the right engine ablaze and wobbling on the wing of the Boeing 777-200.</p>.<p>Residents in the Denver suburb of Broomfield found large pieces of the plane scattered around their community.</p>.<p>The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has ordered extra inspections after the incident.</p>.<p>FAA chief Steve Dickson said a preliminary safety data review pointed to a need for additional checks of the jet engine's fan blades, which were unique to the model and only used on 777 planes.</p>.<p>Officials from the FAA met with Pratt & Whitney and Boeing representatives on Sunday evening, he added.</p>.<p>The US National Transportation and Safety Board (NTSB) said a preliminary investigation indicated two fan blades fractured on the number 2 engine on the plan.</p>.<p>"The airplane sustained minor damage," the NTSB said in a statement Sunday. "The examination and documentation of the airplane is ongoing."</p>.<p>Pratt & Whitney said it was cooperating with the NTSB probe and "will continue to work to ensure the safe operation of the fleet."</p>.<p>(The NTSB said the flight had 229 passengers, but United confirmed there were 231.)</p>.<p>United said Sunday it was removing the aircraft from its schedule, "and will continue to work closely with regulators to determine any additional steps."</p>.<p>Japan's transport ministry earlier said it had ordered stricter inspections of engines after a Japan Airlines 777 plane flying from Haneda to Naha experienced trouble with "an engine in the same family" in December.</p>.<p>The engine failure is unwelcome news for Boeing, which also faces a fresh investigation in Holland after a Boeing 747-400 cargo plane showered a small town Meerssen with debris injuring two people -- the same day as the Denver incident.</p>.<p>"We have started a preliminary investigation," said Luisa Hubregtse of the Dutch Safety Board, the organisation responsible for looking into aviation incidents.</p>.<p>"However, at this stage it's too early to draw any conclusions," she told AFP.</p>.<p>Boeing only recently resumed deliveries of the 737 MAX following a 20-month global grounding after two tragic crashes killed 346 people.</p>.<p>The MAX began returning to commercial service in late 2020, a time when airline travel remains depressed due to the coronavirus pandemic.</p>.<p>Boeing executives said last month they expect it will take about three years for activity to return to pre-pandemic levels.</p>.<p>Michel Merluzeau, an expert at consultancy AIR, agreed the latest problem did not appear to result from poor plane design by the aerospace giant.</p>.<p>"It's not really a problem for Boeing," he said. "It's more an issue of maintenance -- how United or Pratt & Whitney is maintaining engines that have been in use for a while."</p>.<p>Hamilton of Leeham News said the episode "is an embarrassing headline, but as a practical issue, it will have no impact on Boeing."</p>.<p>Noting the weak demand for longer-service planes during Covid-19, Hamilton predicted some of the carriers could opt to retire the planes rather than return them to service.</p>.<p>Shares of Boeing fell 2.1 percent to $212.88, while Pratt & Whitney's parent company Raytheon Technologies fell 1.7 percent to $73.00.</p>.<p>United rose 3.5 percent to $49.70, joining other carriers in rallying after a positive note from Deutsche Bank about the industry's prospects amid improving Covid-19 trends.</p>