Here’s what else is happening

Aerospace losses in Europe: The chief executive of Airbus called the pandemic “the gravest crisis” the industry has known as he reported the company had a net loss of 481 million euros (about $522 million) in the first quarter of 2020. Sixty of the company’s aircraft could not be delivered in that period.

… and in the U.S.: Airbus rival Boeing reported a net loss of $641 million in the quarter and said it would slash 16,000 jobs, about 10 percent of its staff. The company has said it does not expect air travel to recover to levels reached before the pandemic for three years.

National People’s Congress: China said it would hold the much-delayed annual gathering — the most important event on the country’s political calendar — in Beijing late next month and would ease quarantine restrictions in the capital.

Joe Biden: Frustration in the Democratic Party is mounting over the former vice president’s lack of response to a sexual assault allegation by a former aide. The Biden presidential campaign has said little publicly beyond noting that women deserve to be heard and insisting that the allegation is not true.

Global energy: An “unprecedented” fall in fossil fuel use, driven by the Covid-19 crisis, is likely to lead to a nearly 8 percent drop — the largest ever recorded — in emissions this year, the International Energy Agency said. But experts warned emissions could easily soar again when the pandemic subsides.

Yemen: The first confirmed expansion of the coronavirus was reported in the port city of Aden, prompting renewed calls for a humanitarian cease-fire in the civil war there from aid groups and the United Nations.