Aircraft landing 'near-miss' over Runcorn
Bridge
FlyBe aircraft
A plane carrying 61 passengers and four
crew was involved in a near-miss with Runcorn Bridge
A Flybe plane carrying 61 passengers had a near-miss
with Runcorn Bridge as it came to land at Liverpool
John Lennon Airport, a report says.
The plane, from the Isle of Man, was
coming into land at 09:07 BST on 1 June, according to the Air Accident
Investigation Branch (AAIB) report.
The co-pilot disengaged the autopilot
and turned the aircraft, tracking the bridge while descending, it said.
A
cockpit alert sounded and the flight path was adjusted.
The flight crew
confirmed it was safe to continue the approach and the plane landed
safely.
The aircraft had been descending at a rate of about 2,000ft per
minute and the "Caution Obstacle" alert was generated at a radio height of 894ft
(272.4m) as it approached runway 27, the report said.
Safety 'a
priority'
The Runcorn Bridge is 285ft (87m) over the riverbed and crosses the
River Mersey.
The AAIB said the Enhanced Ground Proximity Warning System
(EGPWS) was a terrain awareness and alerting system that uses internal terrain,
obstacle and airport databases to predict a potential conflict between a flight
path and terrain or obstacle.
"The obstacle concerned in this case was
not positively identified, but was possibly the Runcorn Bridge," the report
said. It was published last month.
A spokeswoman for Flybe said: "Flybe
confirms that safety of its passengers and crew is its number one
priority."
The event highlighted in the AAIB report was "thoroughly
investigated by our own investigators and with correspondence with the AAIB",
she added.
Flybe has taken "a number of actions" to further improve
safety, said the spokeswoman.
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