(Bloomberg) -- Boeing Co.’s net sales this year shrank by 255 jets through April as airlines shelved expansion plans and canceled orders for the grounded 737 Max amid a historic collapse in air travel.

The planemaker didn’t gain any new orders last month and delivered only six planes -- four of them 787 Dreamliners, according to data posted on its website Tuesday. The number of sales lost this year reached 516 when accounting, for example, for orders from customers in financial distress.

Already in crisis because of the beleaguered Max, Boeing is now attempting to counteract the wide-ranging effects from the Covid-19 pandemic, including parts shortages and plunging demand. The company temporarily closed factories in Washington and South Carolina for several weeks as the illness spread among workers. Overseas deliveries have slowed because of the hassle of possible quarantines for pilots who fly new jets home from the U.S.

Few airlines are looking to add new aircraft when much of the global travel industry is fighting for survival. While Airbus SE also is being squeezed, the pressure is especially acute for Chicago-based Boeing, which is working with regulators to end a 14-month flying ban for the 737 Max after two fatal crashes. Buyers can typically opt out of a delivery that has been delayed for a year without facing penalties.

Customers in April canceled orders for 108 Max aircraft, Boeing’s workhorse jet and main source of revenue. Of those, 10 were scrapped by unidentified customers while 98 of the single-aisle planes were pared from orders by China Development Bank Financial Leasing and the aircraft leasing arm of General Electric Co. That was on top of 150 Max cancellations in March.

Airbus recorded 14 deliveries in April, 12 of them narrow-body jets, along with nine new sales. The Toulouse, France-based manufacturer has notched 299 orders net of cancellations this year.

Boeing has been renegotiating delivery schedules with lessors and airlines for the 737 Max as the company prepares to restart its assembly lines this month after a five-month hiatus. The planemaker has signaled that it would slowly step up production and sees delivering 450 of the aircraft built during the grounding as its top priority.

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