U.S. air safety board urges more battery tests for Boeing
787
(Reuters) - The U.S. agency that investigates air
crashes on Thursday called for lithium-ion batteries on Boeing's 787 Dreamliners
to undergo more testing to ensure they are safe.
The National
Transportation Safety Board urged the Federal Aviation Administration to develop
better tests for the uncontrolled overheating that led to a battery fire on a
Dreamliner in 2013, require the tests for future aircraft designs and check
whether 787s and other planes that have the batteries need more
testing.
The NTSB stopped short of calling lithium-ion batteries or
planes flying with them unsafe. The batteries are widely used in cars, laptops
and smartphones and have a tendency to overheat through processes that are not
well understood by scientists.
The NTSB has not yet determined a root
cause for the 787 fire in Boston in January 2013. No one was injured in the
fire, or in two other 787 battery incidents, one in January 2014. Regulators
grounded the 787 fleet for three months last year while Boeing designed a steel
containment box and other measures to stifle battery fires on the innovative
jet.
Boeing said it supports efforts to improve certification
standards.
The FAA said it would carefully review the NTSB's
recommendations.
Boeing also said the tests it conducted in overhauling
the 787 battery system last year "are fully consistent with the recommendations
made by the NTSB today. We therefore remain confident in the safety and
integrity of the comprehensive battery solution which was developed by Boeing,
and approved by the FAA, last year."
Hans Weber, a former FAA adviser and
president of consulting firm TECOP International, said the NTSB's
recommendations were important to ensuring safety.
"It's a professional,
serious step in dealing with new technology that has resulted in some scary
failures," Weber said. "Whether the FAA acts on this one or not remains to be
seen."
In calling for the changes before its fire investigation ends, the
NTSB signaled safety could be improved and pressed the FAA to proceed without
delay.
In a 12-page letter, the NTSB said it sought "to urge the FAA to
take action" on its five recommendations, which include seeking advice from
independent experts on new technologies well before they're authorized for use
on aircraft.
The NTSB criticized testing the FAA, Boeing and battery
maker GS Yuasa Corp (6674.T) of Japan relied on in certifying the batteries for
use in the 787. Recent NTSB tests showed results are affected by environmental
factors, such as how the battery was installed and the temperature of the air
around it. Accordingly, the NTSB urged development of new tests that simulate an
aircraft environment.
While the NTSB's letter focused on Boeing's 787,
the board noted the Airbus (AIR.PA) A380 and Boeing 777 and 737 also have
lithium-ion batteries.
Since certification tests for the various aircraft
are not standardized, the NTSB advised the FAA to review testing used to support
certification of other aircraft.
"Lithium-ion battery designs on
airplanes currently in service might not have adequately accounted for the
hazards associated with internal short circuiting," the NTSB said.
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