Money | Boeing 787 Dreamliner Boeing Knew of Dreamliner Battery Woes Before Fire ANA, JAL had to replace them multiple times By Rob Quinn Posted Jan 30, 2013 4:51 AM CST Copied An All Nippon Airways' Boeing 787 parks on the tarmac off at Haneda Airport in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara, File) Boeing knew it had a big problem with the lithium-ion batteries in its 787 Dreamliners well before a fire prompted safety inquiries and the worldwide grounding of its prize aircraft, the New York Times reports. Officials at All Nippon Airways, which has the world's largest fleet of 787s, say they had to replace 10 of the batteries in the months before the fire after they failed to charge properly or failed to connect with the electrical system. The airline told Boeing about the problem but was not required to inform regulators because the battery trouble did not affect flights or present a safety problem. Japan Airlines says it had similar problems and National Transportation Safety Board investigators have now asked Boeing to provide a full operating history of the batteries, the AP reports. The Dreamliner remains grounded while regulators around the world investigate the problem. Read These Next Trump may be targeting this city next due to a misleading news report. A pastor's dream factored in the discovery of hiker's remains. Angel Reese is in hot water with her own team. Pilot who tried to cut engines won't be going to state prison. Report an error