Flight Safety Foundation considers calling for regional accident
investigation bureaus
The Flight Safety Foundation thinks that
creating new, regionally based aircraft crash investigation teams could help
bring impartiality and expertise to crash probes that might otherwise be
hamstrung by politics, bias and technical inexperience.
Recent commercial
aircraft crashes and resulting investigations have led the nonprofit to consider
recommending such investigation teams be formed, at least in some regions of the
globe, says Flight Safety Foundation chief executive Hassan Shahidi.
"A
regional model would be good first step... We are looking into it," Shahidi
tells FlightGlobal on 21 January.
UIA 737 crash in Iran
A rescue worker
at the scene of a Ukraine International Airlines crash near Tehran
airport
"What we really need is an independent, well-staffed and
trained cross-border international accident investigation authority," adds
Flight Safety Foundation general counsel Kenneth Quinn.
Should the group
approve the idea, it could recommend it to ICAO, which sets guidelines for
aviation crash investigations.
Those guidelines call for accidents to be
investigated by the state in which they occur, though states may pass
investigations to other states. Representatives of countries from which affected
airlines and manufacturers hail are also entitled to participate.
Many
countries have accident investigation bureaus, but only several have the
technical expertise and independence from political pressure needed to complete
unbiased reviews, Quinn says.
"The problem we really have, which is
actually acute, is that we have accident investigation authorities that are too
slow, that are too biased and are too inexperienced, and they don't have enough
resources," he says.
Forming independent investigation boards could help
ensure international conflicts and diplomatic pressures do not influence
investigations. Such groups could be counted on to complete their work "in a
timely way that doesn't trash the reputation of manufacturers or an airline, and
that can be treated with trust", says Quinn.
Accident investigations
involving international parties have long proved contentious, but recent crashes
have spurred more discussion about a solution.
For instance, experts have
concern whether Iranian authorities will permit an unbiased review into the loss
of Ukraine International Airlines flight PS752 on 8 January. Iran already said
its military accidently downed the Boeing 737-800 with a
missile.
Likewise, some safety experts have faulted Indonesia's
investigation team for placing outsize blame on Boeing for the October 2018
crash of a Lion Air 737 Max. They have raised similar concern about the
still-ongoing investigation into the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines 737 Max in
March last year.
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