Two Articles:
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/world/ ... id=1656151
Search for jet's black box could take months
Depth of water, huge search area, weather all problems
Natalie Alcoba, National Post Published]http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... in_america[/url]
Brazil Navy to Reach Crash Debris as Undersea Search Is Planned
By Francisco Marcelino and Helene Fouquet
June 3 (Bloomberg) -- A Brazilian ship today is due to reach floating debris from the Air France plane that crashed in the Atlantic Ocean, as recovery crews prepared to search for the wreckage at a depth of almost 2 miles.
The debris spotted by searchers yesterday off northeastern Brazil confirms that the Airbus SAS A330-200 crashed, Defense Minister Nelson Jobim said in Rio de Janeiro. The material, found over a 5-kilometer (3.1-mile) stretch of ocean, consists of wire and metal pieces, he said. The debris was found about 650 kilometers northeast of Brazil’s Fernando de Noronha island.
A Brazilian patrol vessel will reach the site today at about 11 a.m. New York time, according to a Navy statement. Plane parts are marked with identification numbers that would allow the components to be tracked. Flight 447 went down with 228 people aboard as it flew to Paris from Rio de Janeiro.
“There is no doubt the debris is from the Air France plane, but we still need to do a formal analysis to confirm it,†French Defense Ministry spokesman Christophe Prazuck said today in a telephone interview. “This will happen in the next few days. We need to find a piece of debris that bears a distinctive sign, like a serial number.†He declined to comment further on the investigation.
The wreckage may be located at a depth of 2,000 to 3,000 meters (6,600 to 9,800 feet), French Energy Minister Jean-Louis Borloo said today. France is sending a mini-submarine to the site aboard an oceanographic vessel, Prazuck said. The mini-sub can dive 6,000 meters and will be used to recover the plane’s flight-data and voice recorders after the wreckage is found. The ship will take about eight days to reach the area.
Sensors Froze
Some of the plane’s exterior sensors had frozen, Borloo said on France’s RMC radio, confirming a report on the Web site of the weekly magazine Le Point. The magazine also said the last transmission from the plane concerned electrical failures.
Air France said it isn’t ruling out a lightning strike on the aircraft, which reported an electrical-circuit breakdown and sent 10 automated distress messages before it vanished. The debris was found away from the flight path, suggesting the plane may have attempted to turn back, Brazilian Air Force Colonel Jorge Amaral said yesterday.
The French Aviation Accidents Investigation Bureau expects to publish a preliminary report on the crash by the end of this month, Paul Louis Arslanian, head of the agency, said at a news conference in Paris today.
It may be “weeks or months†before any cause is determined, French Transport Minister Dominique Bussereau said in an interview on French radio station Europe One yesterday.
Towering Thunderstorms
The plane probably flew into thunderstorms that stretched for 600 kilometers, towered as high as 15,000 meters and may have produced lightning, State College, Pennsylvania-based AccuWeather.com said yesterday in a statement. Updrafts as strong as 160 kilometers per hour may have resulted from the storms, creating “severe†turbulence, it said.
“Did we enter a period of climate shocks of an extraordinary violence? This is a question we will have to ask ourselves,†Borloo said. “Experts are divided on that question.â€
Terrorism was unlikely and isn’t thought by investigators to have been the cause, although it can’t be ruled out, he said.
“There is no sign of an attack. It was a sudden problem but it wasn’t instantaneous,†Borloo said. All checks on the aircraft were done correctly before the takeoff, he added.
Brazilian Vice President Jose Alencar ordered three days of mourning as a mark of respect for the victims.
Brazil and France dispatched spotter planes, helicopters and navy vessels to locate the plane, which lost contact two days ago after hitting turbulence. The U.S. military is also assisting in the search.
Paris Prosecutor
The Paris prosecutor’s office took over the crash investigation from the prosecutor in Bobigny, near Charles de Gaulle airport, the plane’s destination. The prosecutor’s office has asked special aviation investigators to look into the events that caused the crash, it said in an e-mailed statement today.
The involvement of prosecutors in French air-crash investigations “is not required under law, but is customary,†Simon Foreman, a partner with Soulez Lariviere & Associes, said today in a telephone interview. The Paris law firm has been involved in several cases involving large-scale loss of life, including the Air France Concorde crash.
“Every time there is a catastrophe, prosecutors investigate the causes of death,†Foreman said.
“It is a practice that is much criticized by the aviation security community, because it inserts the police into every investigation,†he said. “People get intimidated once the police are involved.â€
Passenger List
Air France said it may release the passenger list today. Those on board included 58 Brazilians, 61 French and 26 Germans as well as more than a dozen other nationalities. Brazil’s Jobim said the list may not be complete because some families requested the names of relatives not be made public.
Until now, the A330, a twin-engine airliner that carries about 250 people, had never had a fatal accident in commercial flight. A development model crashed after takeoff during testing, according to Paul Hayes, director of safety at Ascend, an aviation consultant in the U.K.
One high-profile incident with an A330 that didn’t include fatalities occurred on Oct. 7, 2008, when passengers and crew on a Qantas Airways Ltd. flight from Singapore to Perth were slammed into the cabin ceiling after the plane abruptly lost altitude. Fourteen people had serious injuries.
Computer Component
Australian air safety investigators said a month later that a fault in a flight system computer component may have caused the nosedive. The investigation is still under way.
Airbus yesterday said there’s no way of knowing yet whether there are similarities in the two cases.
“It’s premature to link the incidents as long as the investigators don’t have the flight recorder to give more visibility on what happened,†said Stefan Schaffrath, a company spokesman, in a phone interview from Airbus’s Toulouse, France, headquarters.
There are more than 600 A330s flying worldwide that have logged a total of 30 million flight hours, he said.
The missing Airbus was delivered to Air France in April 2005 and had flown about 18,000 hours on some 2,500 flights, the manufacturer said in a statement. The company said it is offering technical assistance in the investigation. Airbus declined to comment on the cause of the crash.
To contact the reporters on this story]Hfouquet1@bloomberg.net[/url].
Last Updated: June 3, 2009 06:04 EDT
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/world/ ... id=1656151
Search for jet's black box could take months
Depth of water, huge search area, weather all problems
Natalie Alcoba, National Post Published]http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... in_america[/url]
Brazil Navy to Reach Crash Debris as Undersea Search Is Planned
By Francisco Marcelino and Helene Fouquet
June 3 (Bloomberg) -- A Brazilian ship today is due to reach floating debris from the Air France plane that crashed in the Atlantic Ocean, as recovery crews prepared to search for the wreckage at a depth of almost 2 miles.
The debris spotted by searchers yesterday off northeastern Brazil confirms that the Airbus SAS A330-200 crashed, Defense Minister Nelson Jobim said in Rio de Janeiro. The material, found over a 5-kilometer (3.1-mile) stretch of ocean, consists of wire and metal pieces, he said. The debris was found about 650 kilometers northeast of Brazil’s Fernando de Noronha island.
A Brazilian patrol vessel will reach the site today at about 11 a.m. New York time, according to a Navy statement. Plane parts are marked with identification numbers that would allow the components to be tracked. Flight 447 went down with 228 people aboard as it flew to Paris from Rio de Janeiro.
“There is no doubt the debris is from the Air France plane, but we still need to do a formal analysis to confirm it,†French Defense Ministry spokesman Christophe Prazuck said today in a telephone interview. “This will happen in the next few days. We need to find a piece of debris that bears a distinctive sign, like a serial number.†He declined to comment further on the investigation.
The wreckage may be located at a depth of 2,000 to 3,000 meters (6,600 to 9,800 feet), French Energy Minister Jean-Louis Borloo said today. France is sending a mini-submarine to the site aboard an oceanographic vessel, Prazuck said. The mini-sub can dive 6,000 meters and will be used to recover the plane’s flight-data and voice recorders after the wreckage is found. The ship will take about eight days to reach the area.
Sensors Froze
Some of the plane’s exterior sensors had frozen, Borloo said on France’s RMC radio, confirming a report on the Web site of the weekly magazine Le Point. The magazine also said the last transmission from the plane concerned electrical failures.
Air France said it isn’t ruling out a lightning strike on the aircraft, which reported an electrical-circuit breakdown and sent 10 automated distress messages before it vanished. The debris was found away from the flight path, suggesting the plane may have attempted to turn back, Brazilian Air Force Colonel Jorge Amaral said yesterday.
The French Aviation Accidents Investigation Bureau expects to publish a preliminary report on the crash by the end of this month, Paul Louis Arslanian, head of the agency, said at a news conference in Paris today.
It may be “weeks or months†before any cause is determined, French Transport Minister Dominique Bussereau said in an interview on French radio station Europe One yesterday.
Towering Thunderstorms
The plane probably flew into thunderstorms that stretched for 600 kilometers, towered as high as 15,000 meters and may have produced lightning, State College, Pennsylvania-based AccuWeather.com said yesterday in a statement. Updrafts as strong as 160 kilometers per hour may have resulted from the storms, creating “severe†turbulence, it said.
“Did we enter a period of climate shocks of an extraordinary violence? This is a question we will have to ask ourselves,†Borloo said. “Experts are divided on that question.â€
Terrorism was unlikely and isn’t thought by investigators to have been the cause, although it can’t be ruled out, he said.
“There is no sign of an attack. It was a sudden problem but it wasn’t instantaneous,†Borloo said. All checks on the aircraft were done correctly before the takeoff, he added.
Brazilian Vice President Jose Alencar ordered three days of mourning as a mark of respect for the victims.
Brazil and France dispatched spotter planes, helicopters and navy vessels to locate the plane, which lost contact two days ago after hitting turbulence. The U.S. military is also assisting in the search.
Paris Prosecutor
The Paris prosecutor’s office took over the crash investigation from the prosecutor in Bobigny, near Charles de Gaulle airport, the plane’s destination. The prosecutor’s office has asked special aviation investigators to look into the events that caused the crash, it said in an e-mailed statement today.
The involvement of prosecutors in French air-crash investigations “is not required under law, but is customary,†Simon Foreman, a partner with Soulez Lariviere & Associes, said today in a telephone interview. The Paris law firm has been involved in several cases involving large-scale loss of life, including the Air France Concorde crash.
“Every time there is a catastrophe, prosecutors investigate the causes of death,†Foreman said.
“It is a practice that is much criticized by the aviation security community, because it inserts the police into every investigation,†he said. “People get intimidated once the police are involved.â€
Passenger List
Air France said it may release the passenger list today. Those on board included 58 Brazilians, 61 French and 26 Germans as well as more than a dozen other nationalities. Brazil’s Jobim said the list may not be complete because some families requested the names of relatives not be made public.
Until now, the A330, a twin-engine airliner that carries about 250 people, had never had a fatal accident in commercial flight. A development model crashed after takeoff during testing, according to Paul Hayes, director of safety at Ascend, an aviation consultant in the U.K.
One high-profile incident with an A330 that didn’t include fatalities occurred on Oct. 7, 2008, when passengers and crew on a Qantas Airways Ltd. flight from Singapore to Perth were slammed into the cabin ceiling after the plane abruptly lost altitude. Fourteen people had serious injuries.
Computer Component
Australian air safety investigators said a month later that a fault in a flight system computer component may have caused the nosedive. The investigation is still under way.
Airbus yesterday said there’s no way of knowing yet whether there are similarities in the two cases.
“It’s premature to link the incidents as long as the investigators don’t have the flight recorder to give more visibility on what happened,†said Stefan Schaffrath, a company spokesman, in a phone interview from Airbus’s Toulouse, France, headquarters.
There are more than 600 A330s flying worldwide that have logged a total of 30 million flight hours, he said.
The missing Airbus was delivered to Air France in April 2005 and had flown about 18,000 hours on some 2,500 flights, the manufacturer said in a statement. The company said it is offering technical assistance in the investigation. Airbus declined to comment on the cause of the crash.
To contact the reporters on this story]Hfouquet1@bloomberg.net[/url].
Last Updated: June 3, 2009 06:04 EDT
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