Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Missing jet pushes industry to improve tracking

Deployment of new systems for aircraft could take a decade

- By KELVIN CHAN

HONG KONG — As investigat­ors prepare to wind down the Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 search after more than two fruitless years, the airline industry is still working to raise safety standards to prevent another plane from going missing.

The disappeara­nce of the Boeing 777-200, which went missing March 8, 2014, with 239 people aboard, left families of the crew and passengers in limbo. The unsolved mystery also spurred airlines and aircraft makers to devise better ways to track flights, locate wreckage and retrieve data from flight data recorders, or “black boxes.”

Authoritie­s said Friday that they’ll suspend the hunt after they finish scouring more than 38,610 square miles of seabed in the Indian Ocean later this year.

There are fewer than 3,900 square miles left to be searched. In a statement read by Malaysian Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai, he acknowledg­ed that “the likelihood of finding the aircraft is fading.”

Earlier this year, the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on, spurred by MH370, moved to tighten up safety standards.

ICAO, a United Nations agency that sets global aviation standards, approved a requiremen­t for all airlines flying over open ocean to report their position every 15 minutes, which will take effect November 2018. Until now, pilots have typically done this every half-hour.

In another move that could help searchers locate crashes, planes in “distress” will have to automatica­lly report their position and other critical informatio­n at least every minute. However, only planes built on or after Jan. 1, 2021, will be required to have this capability.

Minute-by-minute reports would help searchers zero in on a search area of about 100 square miles.

The agency also strengthen­ed standards for the flight data recorders that investigat­ors use to piece together what has happened in aviation disasters.

Beginning in 2018, the ICAO will require that flight data recorders be equipped with underwater locator beacons that can last at least 90 days. MH370’s beacon was designed to last 30 days.

The agency will also require new aircraft designs approved as of 2021 to include a way to retrieve the recorders or their informatio­n before they sink to the seabed. One possibilit­y is an ejection system, another is relaying the data via satellite to ground stations. But deployment of such new systems could take a decade because of the lag between aircraft designs and certificat­ions.

As for Malaysia Airlines, the disaster forced it to carry out a sweeping restructur­ing that analysts said was needed to keep the state-owned carrier afloat after it was shunned by travelers and teetering on the brink of bankruptcy.

A new CEO, Christoph Mueller, cut unprofitab­le routes, grounded jets and axed 6,000 workers from Malaysia’s bloated workforce in a $1.7 billion overhaul that helped the company turn a monthly profit in February, its first in years. But in a sign of lingering turmoil at the company, Mueller abruptly resigned in April.

 ?? VINCENT THIAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Family members of passengers on board the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 that went missing on March 8, 2014, hold up signs after a joint news conference by Malaysia, China and Australia on Friday in Putrajaya, Malaysia. The countries have agreed to...
VINCENT THIAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Family members of passengers on board the Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 that went missing on March 8, 2014, hold up signs after a joint news conference by Malaysia, China and Australia on Friday in Putrajaya, Malaysia. The countries have agreed to...

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