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Showing posts with label whistleblowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label whistleblowers. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

This Month's Adventures in Boeing > Dreamliner crash takes 279 lives, leaves one; Another Dreamliner returns to Hong Kong after technical issue; 3 more Dreamliners diverted in 3 days

 

'Technical issue' forces Air India Boeing 787 to turn back to Hong Kong

By Andrew Sookdeo
The Being 787 Dreamliner has flown commerically since 2011. Photo by Prime Studio, courtesy of The Boeing Co.
The Being 787 Dreamliner has flown commerically since 2011. Photo by Prime Studio, courtesy of The Boeing Co.

June 16 (UPI) -- An Air India Boeing 787-8 flight headed for New Delhi returned to Hong Kong shortly after takeoff Monday because of a "technical issue," Indian media reported.

The issue occurred just days after a similar Dreamliner crashed into buildings in Ahmedabad on Thursday, killing at least 279 people in the aircraft and on the ground. It was the first Dreamliner crash and only one passenger survived.

"A passenger flight, AI315, operated by Air India from Hong Kong to New Delhi made a return to Hong Kong International Airport and requested local standby at around 1p.m. today," a spokesperson for Airport Authority Hong Kong said.

Air India said in a statement that the plane returned to undergo checks "as a matter of abundant precaution."

Some aviation analysts believe the wing flaps on the plane that crashed were not in the correct position.

"It looked like the jet struggled to maintain lift," Dan Bubb, a longtime pilot and now airline historian at the University of Nevada, said.

"Some pilots have speculated that the flaps may not have been set to the takeoff position. Historically, there have been crashes when flaps weren't properly configured."

Authorities have ordered Air India to carry out more safety checks on all Boeing 787s. The Dreamliner has flown commercially since 2011.



One survivor found, 260+ dead in 

Air India plane crash

By Ian Stark & Mike Heuer
Search and recovery teams work through the rubble of the plane crash in Ahmedabad, India, on Thursday. Officials said at least one person survived the crash of an Air India plane that was carrying 242 people. Photo by Hanif Sindh/UPI
1 of 14 | Search and recovery teams work through the rubble of the plane crash in Ahmedabad, India, on Thursday. Officials said at least one person survived the crash of an Air India plane that was carrying 242 people. Photo by Hanif Sindh/UPI | License Photo

June 12 (UPI) -- Police in the Indian city of Ahmedabad said one person survived and more than 260 died in the Air India plane crash as recovery efforts continue on Thursday.

The lone survivor was among the airliner's 242 passengers and crew after the aircraft crashed in a populated area and struck a medical college, The New York Times reported.

Several students died when the plane struck the medical college, which raised the death toll to nearly 270.

A hospital near the crash site received 269 bodies, but the exact death toll won't be announced until after DNA testing is done, according to local police.

The survivor has been identified as a British citizen named Vishwash Kumar Ramesh.

He was in seat 11A on the Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner that was bound for London when it crashed shortly after taking off from an airport in Ahmedabad in western India, BBC News reported.

His brother, Nayan Kumar Ramesh, told the BBC that his brother doesn't know how he survived or got out of the plane.

"Thirty seconds after take-off, there was a loud noise and then the plane crashed. It all happened so quickly," Ramesh told media.

Air India previously announced that Flight AI171 was carrying 169 Indian nationals, 53 British nationals, seven Portuguese nationals and one Canadian national.

Air India Chief Executive Officer Campbell Wilson has since explained the plane was carrying 230 passengers and 12 crew members.

The plane took off from Ahmedabad Airport at about 1:38 p.m. local time en route to London Gatwick Airport.

It crashed into a residential area near the Ahmedabad airport after reaching an altitude of 625 feet shortly after takeoff.

Part of the plane struck the dining area of B.J. Medical College.

Federation of All India Medical Association Vice President Dr. Divyaansh Singh announced in a X post that reports indicate there are 10 to 20 casualties from its student body and resident doctors.

He also has requested that those in or near Ahmedabad donate blood to help those injured in the accident.

Ahmedabad Police also posted a list of 25 people who were injured, most of whom are between the ages of 18 and 20.

Air India Chairman Natarajan Chandrasekaran announced in a statement that he and the airline's parent company Tata Group "are deeply anguished by the tragic event involving Air India Flight 171."

Chandrasekaran further explained that his company will cover the medical expenses of those injured, provide support to B.J. Medical College and give around $117,000 to the families of each person who died in the crash.

He concluded the statement by noting, "We remain steadfast in standing with the affected families and communities during this unimaginable time."




Midair emergencies force four Boeing Dreamliners

to divert India flights

Air India, Lufthansa and British Airways have cited technical issues for the diversions
Midair emergencies force four Boeing Dreamliners to divert India flights











Four Boeing 787 Dreamliners on international flights to India have been forced to turn back due to technical issues over the past few days, according to media reports. 

On Sunday, a Hyderabad-bound Lufthansa flight from Frankfurt returned to the German airport midway through the journey based on a suspected bomb threat, according to sources quoted by the media outlet India Today. Air Traffic Control (ATC) at Hyderabad airport received a message that the Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner was returning to Frankfurt after having taken off.

On Monday, Air India flight AI315 was forced to return to Hong Kong just 15 minutes after taking off, Reuters reported. The airline confirmed the incident, citing “technical issue” as the reason for the return, but did not provide further details. The Boeing 787-8 aircraft successfully landed without incident, and alternate arrangements were made for the passengers.

Also on Monday, a British Airways flight carrying 214 passengers to Chennai was forced to dump fuel and return to London after the pilots reported a suspected technical issue, Business Insider reported. “The aircraft returned to Heathrow as a standard precaution after reports of a technical issue,” a BA spokesperson told the website, adding that there was no “emergency landing.”

In a similar incident, passengers on an Air India San Francisco-Mumbai flight were asked to deplane in Kolkata on Tuesday after a snag was detected in the left engine during a scheduled stop, delaying the onward journey by hours, an India Today report said. These developments come just days after an Air India 787-8 crashed shortly after takeoff in Ahmedabad, killing 290 people. 

Officials told the Associated Press that early indications suggest the aircraft may not have been correctly configured for takeoff. There have been numerous complaints, whistleblower revelations and concerns regarding the safety of Boeing 787s, according to media reports.

In 2019, a New York Times report revealed that John Barnett, a former quality manager who retired in 2017, had filed a whistleblower complaint alleging subpar work on the 787s. In January 2024, another whistleblower alleged that the Dreamliner’s fuselage had improper connections, with gaps that could cause it to break apart in flight.

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Saturday, November 16, 2024

This Week's Adventures in Boeing > Boeing cutting 10% of global work force

 


Boeing cutting 17,000 jobs to ‘adjust its workforce’

after labor union strike


Boeing said it is issuing layoff notices to employees who are included in the aerospace giant’s broader workforce reduction plan.

The approximately 17,000 employees included in the cuts were notified this week and are expected to leave the company in mid-January, Boeing said.

The cuts, which come after a labor union strike, equate to 10% of its workforce.

“We are adjusting our workforce levels to align with our financial reality and a more focused set of priorities,” Boeing said in a statement to FOX Business.

CEO Kelly Ortberg, who took over in August, told staff in a memo last month that the job cuts would include executives, managers and employees.

“Our business is in a difficult position, and it is hard to overstate the challenges we face together,” Ortberg told staff, saying that the situation “requires tough decisions, and we will have to make structural changes to ensure we can stay competitive and deliver for our customers over the long term.”

The company has about 170,000 employees worldwide, many of them working in manufacturing facilities in South Carolina and Washington state.

The company also announced the end of production of its 767 aircraft in 2027 after it completes the current orders for 29 jets.

Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg took over the aerospace company in August.
via REUTERS
Boeing workers in Seattle voted to strike on Sept. 12, rejecting a contract the embattled aviation giant characterized as a boon for staff given the company’s stressed financial condition.
AFP via Getty Images

Boeing also delayed the rollout of its new 777X to 2026, instead of 2025. The delay comes after the recent discovery of a defective part that grounded test flights earlier this year.

The aerospace company faced a strike involving 33,000 workers in the Seattle area.

The strike shut down production of the 737 Max, Boeing’s best-selling plane, and 777s and 767s.

The strike was prompted after workers overwhelmingly refused tentative contract negotiations provided by the company.

The approximate 17,000 employees included in the cuts were notified this week.
AFP via Getty Images

The Max is a key revenue generator for Boeing, which raised more than $24 billion in late October to shore up its shaky finances and protect its investment grade rating following concerns from rating agencies.

Boeing has lurched from crisis to crisis this year, kicking off on Jan. 5 when a door panel blew off a 737 Max jet in midair.

Since then, its CEO departed, its production has slowed as regulators investigated its safety culture and its largest union kicked off the strike on Sept. 13.

The strike’s end on Nov. 5 and the return of Boeing’s workers to the company’s Seattle-area assembly lines this week now support a slow revival of Max production.

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Wednesday, October 23, 2024

This Week's Adventures in Boeing >

 

Boeing-made satellite breaks up into pieces

in space after ‘anomaly’


The Ariane 5 rocket lifts off at the European Spaceport in Kourou, in French Guiana, on Aug. 24, 2016. The rocket successfully launched a pair of communications satellites, the Intelsat-33e and the Intelsat-36. JODY AMIET/AFP via Getty Images

A satellite made by Boeing has broken up in orbit after experiencing an “anomaly” that resulted in its total loss, operators reported Monday.

The service provider, Intelsat, said the satellite disintegrated on Saturday and caused communication and power outages for customers in Europe, Africa and parts of the Asia-Pacific region.

In a press release, Intelsat said they are working with the embattled multinational corporation Boeing and various government agencies to analyze data and “complete a comprehensive analysis of the cause of the anomaly.”

The satellite, called the Intelsat 33e, was launched in 2016 and was intended to have a 15-year lifespan.

The U.S. Space Force issued an alert on its platform, SpaceTrack, confirming the breakup of Intelsat 33E and said agents are currently tracking “around 20 associated pieces” of debris from the satellite.

Intelsat 33e’s destruction is not an immediate threat, the agency claims.

The loss of the Intelsat 33e satellite is only one of the most recent issues plaguing Boeing, which has been fighting off bad press all year.

Earlier in 2024, the Federal Aviation Administration discovered several potential faults on commercial Boeing planes and ordered more safety measures be put in place. The investigation came after Boeing made international headlines when a door plug blew off a 737 MAX 9 plane while it was inflight.

Click to play video: 'US Department of Justice opens criminal investigation over Alaska Airlines mid-flight door blowout'
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US Department of Justice opens criminal investigation over Alaska Airlines mid-flight door blowout

Boeing was also the subject of numerous whistleblower complaints over its safety record and internal standards and has faced federal investigations.

The Boeing Starliner in June suffered thruster failures and helium leaks and subsequently left two astronauts stranded on the International Space Station, where they remain today. Astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams are expected to return to Earth in February 2025, though their original mission was intended to last only eight days.

More than 30,000 workers in Boeing’s commercial plane sector are currently striking over a union disagreement with the company to do with the loss of employee bonuses and pensions, as well as pay increases.

Boeing said it would start laying off about 17,000 employees — about 10 per cent of its workforce — in the coming months.

Boeing has not commented publicly on the unexplained disintegration of the Intelsat 33e satellite.

Service restoration plans are underway, Intelsat said, adding that it is working with third-party providers to mitigate service disruptions for clients.

Officials do not believe the satellite will be recoverable.

Boeing needs to get out of the space industry and try to make safe passenger jets. Their space adventures simply glorify there utter incompetence.

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