Business Day

No passengers seated near Boeing cabin panel that blew out

- David Shepardson, Tim Hepher and Valerie Insinna

The head of the US National Transporta­tion Safety Board (NTSB) said no passengers were seated next to a cabin panel that blew out on an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9, forcing an emergency landing on Friday in a potentiall­y “tragic” incident.

NTSB chair Jennifer Homendy told a press conference late on Saturday the two seats next to the portion of fuselage that blew out were unoccupied.

“We are very, very fortunate here that this didn’t end up in something more tragic,” Homendy said. Parts of the seat next to the fuselage, including the head rest, were missing.

Air safety regulator in the US the Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) on Saturday grounded 171 Boeing 737 MAX 9 jetliners for safety checks after the emergency landing of the plane that was in service for just eight weeks.

A piece of fuselage tore off the left side of the jet as it climbed after take-off from Portland, Oregon, en route to Ontario, California, forcing pilots to turn back and land safely with all 171 passengers and six crew on board. Some minor injuries were reported, Homendy said.

The FAA did not rule out further action as a probe began into the potential structural failure that left a rectangula­r hole in an area of fuselage reserved for an optional additional door but which is plugged and deactivate­d on Alaska Air’s aircraft.

Investigat­ors will look at maintenanc­e records, the pressurisa­tion system and the door components, Homendy said. “We’ll go where the investigat­ion takes us,” she said, asking for the public’s help in recovering the missing door plug believed to be in a suburb west of Portland.

Homendy praised the FAA for swiftly grounding the MAX 9 to “ensure continued safety”.

Alaska Air said it has halted flights by 18 of its MAX 9 planes that it had resumed using after recent in-depth inspection­s. The airline said it is in discussion­s with the FAA “to determine what, if any, further work is required before these aircraft are returned to service”. The FAA could announce inspection requiremen­ts as early as Sunday, officials said.

The Boeing 737 MAX 9s fitted with a special door replacemen­t “plug” cannot fly until they are inspected and repaired if necessary, the FAA said.

The additional door is typically installed by low-cost airlines using additional seats that require more paths for evacuation. However, those doors are permanentl­y plugged, or deactivate­d, on jets with fewer seats, including those of Alaska Air.

The fuselage for Boeing 737s is made by Kansas-based Spirit AeroSystem­s, which separated from Boeing in 2005. Spirit manufactur­ed and installed the particular plug door that suffered the blowout, a source told Reuters on Saturday.

The MAX 9 represents about 220 of the 1,400 MAX jets delivered so far and most of them have the deactivate­d door, meaning they are potentiall­y covered by the order.

Boeing said it supports the FAA decision.

MAX planes were grounded worldwide for 20 months after crashes in Ethiopia and Indonesia, linked to poorly designed cockpit software, killed nearly 350 people about five years ago.

AFFECTED

Alaska Air and United Airlines are the only US carriers using the MAX 9. Alaska Air cancelled 160 flights on Saturday, or 20% of its scheduled trips, while United cancelled 104 flights or 4% of departures.

Alaska Air said the travel disruption­s from the grounding are expected to last until at least the midweek.

The FAA directive applies to aircraft operated by US airlines or in US territory. The EU Aviation Safety Agency adopted the FAA’s directive but noted no EU member state airlines now operate the configurat­ion affected. A British air safety regulator said it will require any MAX 9 operator to comply with the FAA directive to enter its airspace.

Turkish Airlines said it has withdrawn its five Boeing 737 MAX 9 aircraft from service for inspection. Panamanian carrier Copa Airlines said it has temporaril­y grounded 21 737 MAX 9 aircraft.

Boeing is awaiting certificat­ion of its smaller MAX 7 and larger MAX 10, which are needed to compete with the Airbus A321neo model.

Boeing has suffered numerous production issues on the MAX planes in the years since the crashes. The manufactur­er on December 28 urged airlines to inspect all 737 MAX planes for a possible loose bolt in the rudder control system.

The affected Alaska Air Flight 1282 had reached just more than 16,000 feet when the blowout happened, according to FlightRada­r24. “We’d like to get down,” the pilot told air traffic control, according to a recording posted on liveatc.net.

“We are declaring an emergency. We do need to come down to 10,000,” the pilot added, referring to the initial staging altitude for such emergencie­s, below which breathing is considered possible for healthy people without extra oxygen.

SHE ASKED FOR THE PUBLIC’S HELP IN RECOVERING THE MISSING DOOR PLUG BELIEVED TO BE IN A SUBURB WEST OF PORTLAND

 ?? /Reuters ?? Blowout: Oxygen masks hang from the roof beside a missing window and part of a side wall of an Alaska Airlines plane.
/Reuters Blowout: Oxygen masks hang from the roof beside a missing window and part of a side wall of an Alaska Airlines plane.

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