Business Standard

US likely to extend airline laptop ban to Europe

- AGENCIES 11 May

The Trump administra­tion is likely to extend a ban on laptops on commercial aircraft to include some European countries, but is reviewing how to ensure lithium batteries stored in luggage holds do not explode in midair, officials briefed on the matter said on Wednesday.

The European Union has demanded urgent talks with the United States over a possible extension to some European countries of a US ban on airline passengers taking laptops into cabins, saying any security threats faced are common.

Any extension of the ban could impact US carriers such as United Airlines, Delta Air Lines and American Airlines Group. Six US and European officials said they expect the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to make an announceme­nt but declined to say when.

DHS officials plan to meet with airline industry officials on Thursday to discuss security issues, two people briefed on the matter said. Also on Thursday, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly will give a classified briefing to senators about domestic threats and airline issues are expected to be discussed, a congressio­nal aide briefed on the matter said.

In March, the US announced laptop restrictio­ns on flights originatin­g from 10 airports including in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey because of fears that a concealed bomb could be installed in electronic devices taken onto aircraft. Britain quickly followed suit with restrictio­ns on a slightly different set of routes. One European official acknowledg­ed that the expanded ban could affect flights to the United States from Britain.

DHS spokesman Dave Lapan said Kelly “hasn’t made a decision but we continue to evaluate the threat environmen­t and have engaged in discussion­s with airline representa­tives and other stakeholde­rs about the threat.”

Some US airlines have been making plans in the event of an order to require them to bar passengers from travelling to the United States without larger electronic­s in the cabin, airline officials briefed on the matter said.

The US laptop ban and on other electronic devices larger than cell phones has affected direct flights to the United States by Royal Jordanian Airlines, Egypt Air, Turkish Airlines, Saudi Arabian Airlines, Kuwait Airways, Royal Air Maroc, Qatar Airways, Emirates and Etihad Airways.

One issue under discussion is how to ensure that lithium batteries in any large collection of devices stored in airplane holds do not explode in midair, officials told Reuters.

European regulators have warned placing what could be potentiall­y hundreds of devices in the hold on long-haul flights could compromise safety by increasing the risk of fire from poorly deactivate­d lithium-ion batteries.

Peter Goelz, a former managing director at the National Transporta­tion Safety Board in the United States, said a significan­t expansion of the incabin ban on larger electronic­s “is going to represent a major logistical problem for airlines.”

Goelz said more money needs to be spent to improve screening. “It is very difficult to determine whether a dense object is actually a battery or a plastic explosive,” Goelz said.

On Tuesday, Reuters reported that a United Nations agency has begun an effort to craft global guidance for the use of laptops and other portable electronic­s in passenger aircraft cabins after the bans upset airline passengers and Middle Eastern carriers.

 ??  ?? Any expansion of the ban could impact US carriers such as United Airlines, Delta Air Lines and American Airlines Group
Any expansion of the ban could impact US carriers such as United Airlines, Delta Air Lines and American Airlines Group

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