Chattanooga Times Free Press

Human errors, fuel shortage led to crash in Colombia

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BOGOTA, Colombia — A series of human errors caused an airliner to run out of fuel and crash in Colombia last month, killing 71 people including most of a Brazilian soccer team, aviation authoritie­s said Monday.

Colombia’s Civil Aeronautic­s agency concluded in its investigat­ion that the plan for the flight operated by Bolivia-based charter company LaMia did not meet internatio­nal standards. Among the errors made were the decisions to let the plane take off without enough fuel to make the flight safely and then to not stop midway to refuel. The pilot also did not report the plane’s emergency until it was too late, it said.

Neither the company nor Bolivian authoritie­s should have allowed the plane to take off with the flight plan submitted, said Freddy Bonilla, air safety secretary for Colombia’s aviation authority. He said the agency’s preliminar­y conclusion­s were based on the plane’s black boxes and other evidence.

Experts had suggested earlier that fuel exhaustion was a likely cause of the Nov. 28 crash that wiped out all but a few members of the Chapocoens­e soccer team, as well as team officials and journalist­s accompanyi­ng them to a championsh­ip playoff match in Medellin, Colombia.

The BAE 146 Avro RJ85 has a maximum range was 2,965 kilometers (1,600 nautical miles) — just under the distance between Medellin and Santa Cruz, Bolivia, where the plane had taken off at almost full capacity.

The plane was in the air for about 4 hours and 20 minutes when air traffic controller­s in Medellin put it into a holding pattern because another flight had reported a suspected fuel leak and was given priority.

Investigat­ors found that crew members of the LaMia flight were aware of the lack of fuel but waited too long to report the emergency.

Bonilla said that during the flight the pilot and co-pilot are heard on “various occasions” talking about stopping in Leticia — a city near the borders separating Brazil, Peru and Colombia — to refuel but decided not to do so. When the plane entered Colombian airspace it was flying into a wind, which caused more fuel to be consumed.

And when the pilot asked for priority to land in Medellin, six minutes before crashing, the plane already had spent two minutes with a motor shut off, the investigat­ion concluded. All the motors shut down minutes later.

In a recording of a radio message from the pilot, he can be heard repeatedly requesting permission to land due to a lack of fuel and a “total electric failure.” A surviving flight attendant and a pilot flying nearby also overheard the frantic pleas from the doomed airliner.

In addition, there was no explosion upon impact, pointing to a scarcity of fuel.

Investigat­ors in Colombia concluded that the plane did not have the fuel reserves required by internatio­nal standards for such a flight. They said there was no evidence of sabotage or mechanical failure.

Authoritie­s also detected an excess of baggage but did not relate it to the accident, and, according to its plan, the flight was expected to reach 30,000 feet, an altitude for which the plane was not certified.

Details of the complete report by Colombia’s aviation agency will be released in April 2017. Bolivia, Brazil and the United Kingdom contribute­d to it.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A preliminar­y investigat­ion concluded that the plane crash that killed most of a Brazilian soccer club last month in Colombia was due to bad judgments and “fuel exhaustion.”
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A preliminar­y investigat­ion concluded that the plane crash that killed most of a Brazilian soccer club last month in Colombia was due to bad judgments and “fuel exhaustion.”

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