Perth Skyshow plane crash: ATSB probes other airshow disasters, safety
standards
The investigation into what caused a fatal plane crash
on Australia Day in Perth has analysed other disasters including the 2015
Shoreham Airshow crash in the UK that killed 11 people.
Perth pilot Peter
Lynch and his passenger and partner Endah Cakrawati died when the Grumman G-73
amphibious aircraft crashed into the Swan River during the City of Perth's
annual Skyworks event on Australia Day.
The seaplane nose-dived into the
water about 5pm in a plunge the Australian Transport Safety Bureau said was
"consistent with an aerodynamic stall".
The plane broke on impact in
front of hundreds of horrified witnesses gathered along the Swan River foreshore
to watch an air display Mr Lynch was part of in the lead up to the fireworks
show.
In a statement to WAtoday, the Civil Aviation Safety Authority said
Mr Lynch's aircraft was operating as part of an approved air display, which was
given special permission to operate.
Immediately after the crash, the
ATSB began an investigation and is now probing the "planning, approval and
oversight of the air display", sifting through years of data for the Perth event
and other air displays across Australia, as well as "procedures and guidance
relating to Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA)-authorised air
displays".
As part of its inquiry, the ATSB analysed the Shoreham Airshow
crash, in which an ex-military Hawker Hunter jet aircraft failed to complete a
loop manouevre and crashed into a highway, killing 11 people on the ground and
injuring 13, including the pilot.
The final report of a UK investigation
into that crash concluded it was caused by pilot error, with the aircraft too
low to safely complete the loop.
The Shoreham Airshow crash killed 11 people on the
ground.
For the Perth crash, the ATSB had previously said it had
"not identified any evidence to indicate that pilot incapacitation or aircraft
serviceability were contributing factors to the collision with
water".
However, it looked at the Shoreham crash to compare the approval
processes and safety regulations for airshows around the world with
Australia.
An ATSB image showing the flight path of the plane
over the foreshore and river.
"Preliminary analysis of this
information has identified differences in the approval process within CASA,
between civil and military (including combined) displays and between Australia
and other countries," the ATSB said.
"The ATSB is continuing to analyse
this information, to determine whether there are any systemic safety issues in
relation to authorised air displays."
The investigation is continuing,
with a final report expected to be completed by January 2018.
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