Ten years on, questions remain over
response to Air France 447
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[June 01, 2019]
By Tim Hepher and Allison Lampert
SEOUL/MONTREAL (Reuters) - As Air France
pilots fought for control, an Airbus A330 passenger jet plummeted from
38,000 feet for four minutes, its engines running but its wings unable
to seize enough air to fly.
The doomed jet, weighing 205 tonnes, was in freefall after entering an
aerodynamic stall. The ordeal ended in tragedy in the early hours of
June 1, 2009 https://reut.rs/2YYR1lt, mid-way from Rio de Janeiro to
Paris during an Atlantic storm, killing all 228 people on board.
As relatives mark the disaster's tenth anniversary, the aviation
industry is still implementing lessons learned from Air France flight
447 even as it faces a new crisis over the two-month-old global
grounding of Boeing's 737 MAX aircraft.
French investigators found the crew of AF447 mishandled the loss of
speed readings from sensors blocked with ice from the storm, and pushed
it into a stall by holding the nose too high.
The BEA investigation agency called for improved training of pilots,
instructors and inspectors, and better cockpit design among
recommendations to prevent a repeat of the catastrophe.
The crash, which sparked a wider debate about the balance of humans and
technology, is seen as one of a handful of accidents that changed
aviation. But it has taken as much as a decade to implement some
recommendations put forward by the BEA.
Even before finding the main part of the wreckage, the agency called in
late 2009 for improved tracking of aircraft.
The initial reaction of the airline industry was lukewarm and the
regulatory panel charged with such discussions had gone for some time
without meeting because it lacked a secretary, according to people with
direct knowledge of the discussions.
It was not until after the disappearance of a second jet in 2014, the
MH370 - a Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777, that regulators took firm
action, they said.
A decision to require signals every 15 minutes in remote zones came into
force last year.
"After AF447 many people had an intuitive perception that an accident of
a plane cruising over the ocean is very, very rare and so it wasn't
evident that there would be another (case)," said the BEA's current
director, Remi Jouty.
"To see adoption of international norms taking time was frustrating. But
we know processes are very slow, and then MH370 accelerated matters and
there was momentum," he told Reuters.
Airlines holding annual talks in Seoul this weekend will seek to restore
confidence strained by the two recent Boeing crashes and still haunted
by the disappearance of MH370.
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Debris from the missing Air France flight 447 is seen at the Air
Force base in Recife June 12, 2009. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
A spokesman for the International Civil Aviation Organization, the
United Nations' aviation agency, cautioned against drawing links
between AF447 and Malaysia's MH370."The real aircraft tracking
recommendations came after MH370, and the only reason they appear to
have been adopted more quickly is because they leveraged the work
already initiated post-AF447," he said.
AUTOPILOT DILEMMA
A second major upheaval from AF447 concerned training, BEA's Jouty
said. Investigators rarely cast blame for accidents but seek to
understand the mental picture facing a confused crew and what
training is needed to avoid future disasters.
Together with the fatal crash of a Colgan Air turboprop near
Buffalo, New York, in 2009, the AF447 tragedy led to new procedures
and training.
Yet other key recommendations remain mired in disagreement.
The BEA called in 2011 for an indicator showing pilots the "Angle of
Attack" - a stall-related parameter that is once again in the
spotlight after MAX crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia.
Opponents say civil pilots are trained to rely on other data and the
gauge would be redundant or even confusing.
For almost 20 years, many investigators have also called for cockpit
video cameras to record what information is actually displayed to
pilots. The BEA repeated the proposal after AF447.
Pilot unions oppose the idea due to concerns over privacy and fears
it could be a distraction.
Loss of control remains a worry.
Air France and French unions have defended the AF447 pilots, saying
they faced conflicting alarms.
"I've been really for the past 20 to 25 years pushing people to fly
manual," said Mohammed Aziz, a former air investigator and
consultant with Aviation Strategies International, adding many
pilots are ordered to use autopilot as much as possible.
"Automation is what makes your life much easier but then the minute
you need to use your skills you find that most pilots have lost
some," Aziz added.
(Reporting by Tim Hepher; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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