Oman Daily Observer

MH370 search team raises prospect plane could lie elsewhere

Fugro has been combing area roughly size of Greece for two years; Malaysia-China-Australia tripartite meeting today

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SYDNEY: Top searchers at the Dutch company leading the underwater hunt for Malaysia Airlines jet MH370 say they believe the plane may have glided down rather than dived in the final moments, meaning they have been scouring the wrong patch of ocean for two years.

Flight MH370 disappeare­d in March 2014 with 239 passengers and crew on board en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur. Searchers led by engineerin­g group Fugro have been combing an area roughly the size of Greece for two years.

That search, over 120,000 square kilometres of the southern Indian Ocean off Western Australia, is expected to end in three months and could be called off after that following a meeting of key countries Malaysia, China and Australia on Friday.

The three countries agreed in April 2015 that should the aircraft not be located within the search area, and in the absence of any new credible evidence, the search area would not be extended. So far, nothing has been found.

“If it’s not there, it means it’s somewhere else,” Fugro project director Paul Kennedy said.

Kennedy does not exclude extreme possibilit­ies that could have made the plane impossible to spot in the search zone, and still hopes to find the craft. But he and his team argue another option is the plane glided down — meaning it was manned at the end — and made it beyond the area marked out by calculatio­ns from satellite images.

“If it was manned it could glide for a long way,” Kennedy said. “You could glide it for further than our search area is, so I believe the logical conclusion will be well maybe that is the other scenario.”

Doubts that the search teams are looking in the right place will likely fuel calls for all data to be made publicly available so that academics and rival companies can pursue an “open source” solution — a collaborat­ive public answer to the airline industry’s greatest mystery.

Fugro’s controlled glide hypothesis is also the first time officials have learnt some support to contested theories that someone was in control during the flight’s final moments.

Since the crash there have been competing theories over whether one, both or no pilots were in control, whether it was hijacked — or whether all aboard perished and the plane was not controlled at all when it hit the water. Adding to the mystery, investigat­ors believe someone may have deliberate­ly switched off the plane’s transponde­r before diverting it thousands of miles.

The glide view is not supported by the investigat­ing agencies: America’s Boeing Co, France’s Thales SA, US investigat­or the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, British satellite company Inmarsat PLC, the UK Air Accidents Investigat­ion Branch and the Australian Defence Science and Technology Organisati­on.

The meeting between officials from China, Australia and Malaysia is expected to discuss the future of the search. The three government­s have previously agreed that unless any new credible evidence arises the search would not be extended, despite calls from victims’ families.

Any further search would require a fresh round of funding from the three government­s on top of the almost A$180 million ($137 million) that has already been spent, making it the most expensive in aviation history.

Deciding the search area in 2014, authoritie­s assumed the plane had no “inputs” during its final descent, meaning there was no pilot or no conscious pilot. They believe it was on auto-pilot and spiralled when it ran out of fuel.

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