Flight MH370 Update: Officials Plan Next Phase Of Deep-Sea Sonar Search
For Missing Plane
Authorities working to locate the missing
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 may extend the search area beyond the current
zone in a remote part of the southern Indian Ocean. The move comes even as
officials from Australia, Malaysia and China decided last month to suspend the
search for the Boeing 777-200 if no credible clues are found in the current
search area.
Greg Hood, the new head of the Australian Transport Safety
Bureau (ATSB), said this week that authorities were planning the next phase of
the deep-sea sonar search for MH370 in case the current area turns up nothing.
The search of a 46,000-square-mile area is due to end in the coming months.
While authorities have already spent $160 million for locating the missing
plane, Hood reportedly said that more funding commitment was required if the
search is to be expanded.
"If it is not in the area which we defined,
it's going to be somewhere else in the near vicinity," he reportedly said.
Authorities reportedly said that the analysis of a wing fragment known
as a flaperon found on Reunion Island off the African coast in July last year
will most likely help narrow a possible next search area outside the current
boundary.
Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research
Organization's oceanography department in the island state of Tasmania will
receive six replicas of the flaperon to determine whether it is the wind or the
currents that affect how they drift, Hood said.
The flaperon was the
first piece of wreckage to be recovered from the missing jet, which went missing
on March 8, 2014, with 239 people on board while on its way from Kuala Lumpur to
Beijing. Following this, several debris pieces have emerged that authorities
believe most "likely" belong to the missing jet.
Peter Foley, the ATSB's
director of Flight MH370 search operations since the outset, told the Associated
Press that he hoped the enhanced drift modeling would narrow the next search
area to 340 miles.
"Even the best drift analysis is not going to narrow
it down to x-marks-the-spot," he said.
Over the last few weeks, theories
have surfaced that say Zaharie Ahmad Shah, captain of the missing plane,
"deliberately flew the plane into the Indian Ocean." However, Malaysian
authorities refuted the claims saying that "he (Zaharie) had simulated the
flight path, but it is one of thousands of simulations to many parts of the
world. We cannot, just based on this, confirm he did it."
Recent analysis
of the final satellite signals also suggest the plane was descending at a rate
of between 12,000 feet and 20,000 feet a minute before it crashed.
"The
rate of descent combined with the position of the flap if it's found that it is
not deployed will almost certainly rule out either a controlled ditch or glide,"
Foley said. "If it's not in a deployed state, it validates, if you like, where
we've been looking."
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