PARIS (Reuters) — Fresh questions have
been raised over air traffic co-ordination after a preliminary report on
the Malaysia Airlines plane that disappeared almost two months ago
revealed 90 minutes of wasted effort while controllers looked in the
wrong country.
While Flight MH370's disappearance has led to calls for real-time
tracking, it has also re-focused attention on the gap between what
controllers sometimes think and see, which complicated early efforts
to find Air France 447 in 2009.
Some 25 minutes after the Malaysian jet was first reported missing
over the Gulf of Thailand on March 8, the airline told controllers
that it had flown onto Cambodian airspace. It later added it had
been able to exchange signals, the report said.
Half an hour later, the airline reassured controllers that the
Boeing 777 was in a "normal condition" based on a signal placing it
even further east, on the other side of Vietnam.
In fact, by then it had flown back west across Malaysia and was
already on a new southerly course thought to have taken it across
the tip of Indonesia and towards the Indian Ocean, where
investigators believe it crashed with 239 people on board.
The false trail appears to have cost controllers time, according to
maps and a chronology released on Thursday.
Unnoticed by civil controllers because its transponder was switched
off, and deemed no threat by a military radar controller, the
aircraft flew back across Malaysia and the Malacca Straits for an
hour while the airline believed it was in Cambodian and then
Vietnamese airspace.
The airline later told controllers the information had been based on
a "projection" and was not reliable, according to the report.
Malaysia Airlines could not be reached for comment.
The confusion echoes a fumble when Air France 447 vanished over the
Atlantic five years ago. Controllers at first mistook a virtual
flight path for the plane's actual course, according to an official
report, which may have delayed a search operation.
In both cases, people on the ground were looking only at projections
when they thought they were looking at real data.
Both events illustrate the problems in handling a growing amount of
air traffic crossing through remote areas, where controllers and
dispatchers sometimes have to fill in the blanks by anticipating
where an aircraft should be.
"It is a natural consequence of the old traditional industry ways,
which are limited by communications capability," said air traffic
control expert Hans Weber, president of U.S.-based consultancy TECOP
International.
Experts say such methods are not necessarily unsafe because
controllers simply compensate for uncertainty by leaving a bigger
"bubble" of vacant space around a jet to avoid collision. But that
can also lead to delays and greater congestion.
"Controllers anticipate where a plane's next call should come from:
that is what they do because that is all they have to work with,"
said Weber.
Many private satellite firms are offering flight tracking services,
but analysts say they face problems of capacity due to sharp rises
in global air traffic expected over coming years.
Such issues could be overtaken by broader plans for a radical
overhaul of air traffic control in the next decade in the United
States and Europe, using satellites. But the schemes are costly and
have not yet been widely adopted elsewhere.
(Additional reporting by Siva Govindasamy;
editing by Raju
Gopalakrishnan)