The Borneo Post

‘Tech advances will lead to MH370 discovery’

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SYDNEY: The resting place of missing flight MH370 will eventually be found but it will require advances in science and technology, including artificial intelligen­ce, Malaysia Airlines’ chief said yesterday.

No trace of the Boeing 777, which disappeare­d in March 2014 with 239 people on board, was found during a lengthy deep sea hunt in the southern Indian Ocean off western Australia, with the search called off in January.

“There will be advances in science that will help locate the wreckage eventually,” the Malaysian carrier’s chief executive Peter Bellew told The Australian newspaper, adding the discovery “might unlock closure for some people”.

Bellew, in Sydney for an aviation summit, said the advances could come through ‘ the availabili­ty of artificial intelligen­ce that’s coming on stream’, high- capacity computing power and university research.

He did not give further details about what specific research could lead to a breakthrou­gh, but added that private efforts to locate the plane could also play a part.

So far, three fragments of MH370 have been found on western

There will be advances in science that will help locate the wreckage eventually. Peter Bellew, Malaysia Airlines chief executive

Indian Ocean shores, including a two-metre wing part known as a flaperon.

“( There are people) who are spending a lot of their own resources at the moment and coordinati­ng with authoritie­s... I do think somebody will make a breakthrou­gh somewhere around this, or a combinatio­n of people,” Bellew said.

“It will create a situation where there will be some chance of pinpointin­g the location of where the aircraft may well be.”

Australia’s national science body CSIRO said in April that MH370 was ‘ most likely’ lying north of the former search zone — a 120,000 square kilometre area largely defined through satellite ‘pings’ and the flight’s estimated fuel load.

But Transport Minister Darren Chester has said the underwater probe would not resume unless new evidence about the specific location of the aircraft emerges.

Australia last month released to the public detailed maps showing the topography of the sea floor where the search took place, with a second set of data to be released in mid-2018. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows Havila Harmony, one of three ships scouring the southern Indian Ocean for the remains of missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. — AFP photo
File photo shows Havila Harmony, one of three ships scouring the southern Indian Ocean for the remains of missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. — AFP photo
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