Saturday, 5 Oct 2024

Ethiopian Airlines crash: what we know so far about what happened and why

Six minutes after takeoff on Sunday morning, Ethiopian Airlines Flight ET302 crashed just outside Addis Ababa.

None of the 157 passengers and crew on board survived, authorities said. People from at least 35 countries are among the dead, including 18 Canadians.

The Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft left Bole International Airport at 8:38 a.m. before losing contact with the control tower just a few minutes later at 8:44 a.m. It crashed near the town of Bishoftu.

Prior to the crash, the pilot mentioned that he had difficulties and that he wanted to return,” he said.

It’s not yet known what caused the plane to crash — and there may not be definitive answers for a long time.

Aviation expert Jock Williams, a retired Canadian Air Force fighter pilot and Transport Canada flight safety official, said that it could be a year before a final report into the cause of the crash is available.

“Because the agencies that do these accident reports, they don’t want to make a mistake,” he explained. “If they make a mistake, it can cost lives in the hundreds or thousands, potentially. It can also cost millions or billions of dollars so they have to get it exactly right, and that’s why it takes them so long to formulate their impression of what happened.”

Williams said, however, that the circumstances appear to be “virtually identical” to the Lion Air disaster in October, in which the same aircraft model crashed shortly after takeoff in Indonesia, killing all on board.

“It appears that the flight crew must have said to the air traffic control authorities over the radio that they were having difficulty with either speed control or aircraft attitude control, both of which are related to an automatic trim system, which I think is unique right now to the 737-800,” he said.

The Indonesia National Transportation Safety Committee determined that Lion Air Flight 610 had experienced “erroneous input from one of its Angle of Attack (AOA) sensors,” which help to see that air flows over a plane’s wings.

In response, Boeing directed operators to “existing flight crew procedures,” where they found “erroneous input from an AOA sensor.”

However, Indonesia’s transportation safety committee also found that the Boeing 737 MAX 8 that crashed wasn’t in airworthy condition, a preliminary report found. The final report has not yet been released.

Another aviation analyst, Scott Hamilton of Leeham News, said in a post he cautions against comparing the two crashes, especially since the black box flight data recorders have not been yet recovered.

“It should be noted that Ethiopian is considered one of the best airlines in the world and the best in Africa. It’s got a good safety record, and service is considered very good. This is in contrast to the spotty safety record of Lion Air,” said Hamilton.

The MAX 8, released in 2017, is Boeing’s latest version of the 737, one of world’s the most successful planes.

“There’s more 737s flying than any other commercial jet airliner,” Williams said.

In a statement, Boeing said it would be sending a technical team to the crash site in Ethiopia to provide technical assistance under the direction of the Ethiopia Accident Investigation Bureau and the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board.

—With files from Jesse Ferreras, Global News, Reuters and the Associated Press

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