USA TODAY US Edition

CEO accepts fault in two Boeing Max jet crashes

Report reveals crew’s fight with flight system

- John Bacon and Jane Onyanga-Omara

The chairman of Boeing acknowledg­ed Thursday for the first time that a new maneuverin­g system was responsibl­e for two jet crashes that killed almost 350 people, and he apologized to the families and friends of the victims.

“We at Boeing are sorry for the lives lost in the recent 737 accidents and are relentless­ly focused on safety to ensure tragedies like this never happen again,” CEO Dennis Muilenburg said in a videotaped statement on Twitter.

Muilenburg said the details of airline accidents normally await a final report from government­s, “but with the release of the preliminar­y report of the Ethiopian Flight 302 accident investigat­ion, it is apparent that in both flights, the Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System, known as MCAS, activated in response to erro

angle of attack informatio­n.”

That preliminar­y report, issued Thursday, indicated the crew of the Ethiopian Airlines jet that crashed last month, killing all 157 people aboard, performed all procedures recommende­d by the aerospace giant but failed to gain control of the doomed aircraft. The report reveals details of the crew’s intense but ill-fated efforts to save the Boeing 737 Max from catastroph­e.

Muilenburg, who spoke from the floor of a Boeing hangar, said the history of the aviation industry shows that most accidents are caused by a “chain of events,” and the latest tragedies are no exception. “We know we can break one of those chain links in these two accidents,” he said. “As pilots have told us, erroneous activation of the MCAS function can add to what is already a high workload environmen­t. It’s our responsibi­lity to eliminate this risk. We own it, and we know how to do it.”

The jet experience­d “nose dive conditions” almost immediatel­y after takeoff, Ethiopian Minister of Transport Dagmawit Moges said.

“The crew performed all the procedures repeatedly provided by the manufactur­er but were not able to control the aircraft,” Moges said at the news conference in the capital, Addis Ababa.

Peter Goelz, former managing director of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, said the report thickens the cloud hanging over Boeing and the FAA since the tragedy, the second crash of a Boeing 737 Max in five months.

Boeing updated its instructio­ns on handling such an emergency after a Lion Air crash in Indonesia in October that killed all 189 people aboard.

“The news is that the pilots followed the instructio­ns from Boeing that were endorsed by the FAA, and it didn’t save the plane,” Goelz told USA TODAY. “I don’t see these planes getting back in the air anytime soon.”

The report recommends that the flight control system should be reviewed by Boeing and that aviation authoritie­s should verify the system before the aircraft is released to operation, Moges said.

The report describes how the plane was less than two minutes into its flight from Addis Ababa on March 10 when one of the angles of attack sensors began providing faulty informatio­n, indicating an imminent stall. The pilots repeatedly tried without success to pull the jet’s nose up, the report revealed.

“The captain called out three times ‘pull up’ and the first officer acknowledg­ed,” according to the report.

The aircraft’s automated anti-stallneous ing system, the MCAS, tried to force the nose down multiple times, the report says.

The pilots followed emergency procedures and turned off the system, the report says. The pilots tried to use the backup manual wheel, but the airplane was traveling too fast, according to the report. The jet crashed six minutes into takeoff.

“The aircraft impacted in a farm field and created a crater approximat­ely 10 meters deep, with a hole of about 28 meters width and 40 meters length,” the report says. “Most of the wreckage was found buried in the ground.”

A final report on the crash could be a year away, Moges said.

Boeing said it is working on a software update for the MCAS. The FAA stressed in a statement that the report was preliminar­y and based on informatio­n “obtained during the early stages” of the investigat­ion.

The FAA and NTSB remain involved in the investigat­ion, the statement said.

Moges has said preliminar­y data, obtained mostly from the plane’s voice and data recorders, indicated “clear similariti­es” between the Indonesian and Ethiopian crashes.

At issue is the MCAS installed on 737 Max aircraft to help compensate for heavy engines placed more forward on the wings.

 ?? EPA-EFE ?? Workers search the crash site for pieces of wreckage from an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft near Bishoftu, Ethiopia, on March 13.
EPA-EFE Workers search the crash site for pieces of wreckage from an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 Max 8 aircraft near Bishoftu, Ethiopia, on March 13.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States