U.S. aviation regulators conduct inspection at the Mexico City Airport

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FILE PHOTO: An Aeromexico Boeing 737 MAX 9 fuselage, part of the new airplanes incorporated to its fleet, is pictured at the Benito Juarez International airport, in Mexico City, Mexico, July 14, 2021. Picture taken July 14, 2021. REUTERS/Luis Cortes/File Photo

U.S. aviation regulators finished a review of Mexico’s airspace safety but have not yet announced a final decision, Mexico’s transportation ministry said on Friday, June 2nd, more than two years after the country was stripped of its top air rating.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) still has several weeks to finalize a decision about whether Mexico will recover the rating, the transportation ministry said in a statement.

The FAA downgraded Mexico’s aviation safety rating to Category 2 in 2021, citing safety deficiencies and blocking Mexican carriers from adding new U.S. flights.

Since Mexico lost the rating, the FAA has conducted a series of audits on the local civil aviation authority and its compliance with international safety standards.

A government source told Reuters earlier on Friday that the concluded audit was Mexico’s “last,” implying a positive resolution.

Mexican newspaper El Financiero had earlier reported that Mexico had already recovered the safety rating, citing government sources, but a short time later backtracked on the initial report.

Restoring the FAA’s Category 1 safety rating would clear airlines like Aeromexico and Volaris to add new routes to the United States and potentially carry out marketing agreements with U.S. carriers.

Aeromexico CEO Andres Conesa said last year the damage done by the downgrade was “significant.”

In the two years since the FAA dropped Mexico to Category 2, the country has revamped its aviation standards, replacing officials and most recently overhauling its civil aviation law.

Asked to comment on Mexico’s air safety rating, an FAA spokesperson would only say the agency continues “to provide assistance to Mexico’s civil aviation authority.”

Source: El Mexicano

The Mexico City Post