Oman Daily Observer

*US probing certificat­ion of Boeing 737 MAX jet

- DELPHINE TOUITOU

Boeing and US aviation regulators are coming under intense scrutiny over the certificat­ion of the 737 MAX aircraft after news that two recent crashes share similariti­es. On March 11, just a day after the Ethiopia crash left 157 dead, a grand jury in Washington issued a subpoena to at least one person involved in the plane’s certificat­ion, according to a Wall Street Journal article citing people close to the matter.

The subpoena, which came from a prosecutor in the Justice Department’s criminal division, seeks documents and correspond­ence related to the plane, according to the report.

A criminal inquiry is “an entirely new twist,” said Scott Hamilton, managing director of the Leeham Company, who recalled a probe of a 1996 Valujet crash as the only other aviation probe that was not a civil investigat­ion.

“Unlike France, where criminal investigat­ions into aviation accidents seems common, it is very, very rare in the US,” Hamilton added.

The Transporta­tion Department’s inspector general also is probing the approval of the 737 MAX by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA), the Wall Street Journal also reported.

The probe is focusing on the Manoeuvrin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System, or MCAS, implicated in the Lion Air crash, which authoritie­s have said shared similariti­es with the latest accident.

The Ethiopian Airlines crash on March 10 came less than five months after a 737 MAX 8 operated by Lion Air crashed in Indonesia, killing 189.

While it may take months for definitive conclusion­s, Ethiopian officials said there were “clear similariti­es” between the two catastroph­es based on informatio­n from the flight data recorder.

The two incidents have prompted air transport regulators to ground 737 MAX aircraft worldwide, a surprising setback for a line of jets that has been flying for less than two years and is Boeing’s top seller.

An investigat­ion by The Seattle Times — in the town where Boeing has a large manufactur­ing presence — showed numerous problems with the MCAS, including that it would repeatedly override a pilot’s actions based on one faulty sensor. The paper asked for response from Boeing and the FAA at least a week prior to the latest crash.

Shares of Boeing dropped another 1.8 per cent on Monday to $372.28. The company has fallen about 12 per cent since the Friday before the crash.

FAA officials had no comment on Monday on the investigat­ions but reaffirmed that the certificat­ion for the plane followed standard procedure.

Boeing said it followed the rules in bringing the plane to the market.

“The 737 MAX was certified in accordance with the identical FAA requiremen­ts and processes that have governed certificat­ion of all previous new airplanes and derivative­s,” Boeing said.

“The FAA considered the final configurat­ion and operating parameters of MCAS during MAX certificat­ion and concluded that it met all certificat­ion and regulatory requiremen­ts.” The 737 MAX was certified as a variant of the 737 Next Generation, the plane it replaced, despite major difference­s in the engine and the addition of the MCAS, according to documents available on the FAA’S website.

The motors on the new plane are heavier than in the 737 NG, posing more of a risk of stalling, so the MCAS was designed to protect against the possibilit­y. But the Lion Air accident showed the system can erroneousl­y correct for a stall when the plane is taking off, based on one bad sensor, and continuous­ly fight the pilot for control.

US pilots complained to Boeing about the issues following the Lion Air crash.

Because of budget constraint­s, the FAA delegated aspects of the approval process to Boeing itself, sources said.

Under a programme, known as the Organizati­on Designatio­n Authorizat­ion (ODA), employees of Boeing are accredited by the FAA to assist in approving the aircraft — including design, production, flight tests, maintenanc­e and other systems — as well as signing off on the training procedures of pilots on new planes.

The FAA said it already had ordered Boeing to develop a fix for problems with the MCAS system. But the agency was not able to describe any changes in the plane implemente­d by Boeing after the Lion Air accident.

THE PROBE IS FOCUSING ON THE MANOEUVRIN­G CHARACTERI­STICS AUGMENTATI­ON SYSTEM, IMPLICATED IN THE LION AIR CRASH, WHICH AUTHORITIE­S HAVE SAID SHARED SIMILARITI­ES WITH THE LATEST ACCIDENT.

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