Brazilian plane spins before crashing, killing all 61 on board
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[August 10, 2024]
By Gabriel Araujo, Andre Romani and Luana Maria Benedito
SAO PAULO (Reuters) -A regional turboprop plane fell into what aviation
experts called a flat spin before crashing in a residential neighborhood
near Sao Paulo in Brazil on Friday, killing all 61 people on board.
Regional carrier Voepass said the plane, bound for Sao Paulo's
international airport, took off from Cascavel, in the state of Parana,
and crashed at around 1:30 p.m. (1630 GMT) in the town of Vinhedo, some
80 km (50 miles) northwest of Sao Paulo.
Video shared on social media showed the ATR-72 aircraft spinning out of
control as it plunged down behind a cluster of trees near houses,
followed by a large plume of black smoke.
Nearby resident Daniel de Lima said he heard a loud noise before looking
outside his condominium in Vinhedo and seeing the plane in a horizontal
spiral.
"It was rotating, but it wasn't moving forward," he told Reuters. "Soon
after it fell out of the sky and exploded."
City officials at Valinhos, near Vinhedo, said a home in the local
condominium complex had been damaged after the plane crashed into its
backyard. None of the residents were hurt.
"I almost believe the pilot tried to avoid a nearby neighborhood, which
is densely populated," de Lima said.
The plane's unusual final circling motion before hitting the ground
triggered widespread curiosity among aviation experts, leading some to
speculate that ice had built up on the plane or it had experienced
engine failure, but investigators said it was too early to determine the
cause of the crash.
"Today ice was predicted (at the altitudes the plane was flying at), but
within the acceptable range," Voepass Chief Operations Officer Marcel
Moura told a press conference.
"But the plane is sensitive to ice, that could be a starting point,"
Moura said, adding the plane's de-icing system, along with all other
systems, had been deemed operational before takeoff.
Brazilian aviation engineer and crash investigator Celso Faria de Souza
told Reuters that a buildup of ice could have caused the plane to stall
and spiral in the way that it did.
An ATR-72 crashed in 1994 in Indiana, killing 68, after the plane was
unable to bank due to ice accretion. Another ATR-72 stalled out in 2016
in Norway after ice built up on the plane, but the pilot was able to
regain control of the aircraft.
An ATR-27 also crashed in Nepal in 2023, with the final report
attributing pilot error.
The head of Brazilian aviation accident investigation center Cenipa said
the plane's so-called "black box" containing voice recordings and flight
data had been recovered from the site.
U.S. aviation safety expert Anthony Brickhouse said investigators would
look at things like weather and whether the engines and controls were
functioning properly ahead of the crash.
"From what I've seen, it was definitely what we would call loss of
control," he said.
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Authorities arrive at the site where a turboprop plane crashed
killing all passengers and crew on board, in Vinhedo, Brazil August
9, 2024. REUTERS/Carla Carniel
Flightradar data showed significant gyrations in speed before the
crash, U.S. aviation safety consultant and former commercial pilot
John Cox said, cautioning that he would want to verify the data but
that something "really significant" happened to cause the plane to
spin when it came down.
"It appears that there may have been some catastrophic event before
that loss of control," he said.
Cenipa head Marcelo Moreno told a press conference that initial
reports indicated the aircraft had not reached out to traffic
control to report an emergency.
Voepass, Brazil's fourth-largest airline by market share, had
originally reported 62 people aboard the aircraft. Local outlet
Globo News interviewed two men who said they had missed the flight.
In total, the plane was carrying 57 passengers and four crew,
Voepass said. All were carrying Brazilian-issued documents, the
carrier reported.
Some of the passengers were doctors from Parana heading to a
seminar, Governor Ratinho Junior told journalists.
"These were people who were used to saving lives, and now they've
lost theirs in such tragic circumstances," he said.
Franco-Italian ATR, jointly owned by Airbus and Leonardo, is the
dominant producer of regional turboprop planes seating 40 to 70
people.
ATR told Reuters that its specialists were "fully engaged" with the
investigation into the crash and its customers.
The motor on the plane was a PW 127 produced by Pratt & Whitney
Canada, its parent company RTX Corp confirmed to Reuters. RTX said
that it had offered assistance in the investigation.
Both French and Canadian investigators will participate in the
investigation, Moreno said. Europe's safety regulator also said it
would offer technical assistance.
The crash is Brazil's deadliest since 199 people were killed in 2007
on a flight operated by TAM, which later joined LAN to become what
is now LATAM Airlines.
(Reporting by Gabriel Araujo, Andre Romani, Luana Benedito, Stefanie
Eschenbacher and Luciana Magalhaes in Sao Paulo, Lisandra Paraguassu
and Anthony Boadle in Brasilia and Allison Lampert in Montreal;
Additional reporting by Tim Hepher in Paris;Writing by David Alire
Garcia and Kylie Madry; Editing by Sandra Maler and Miral Fahmy)
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