The Dana plane crash that killed all 153 people aboard in Lagos in June 2012 was likely caused by a pilot’s failure to turn on certain fuel pumps or valves, The Wall Street Journal reported, quoting people familiar with the joint investigation by U.S. and Nigerian officials.
The McDonnell Douglas MD-83, operated
by Nigeria’s Dana Air, lost power from both engines while approaching
the airport in Lagos last June and slammed into an apartment building,
killing at least six more people on the ground.
The most likely cause of the accident
was the crew’s failure to properly monitor fuel flow and turn on certain
fuel pumps, according to industry and government safety experts
familiar with the investigation. That would result in both engines
shutting down almost simultaneously from lack of fuel. No other
significant problems were discovered with the engines or other aircraft
systems, these people said, and the 22-year-old plane had plenty of fuel
onboard to reach the airport.
Partly fed by that fuel, the crash
sparked an intense fire that raged for nearly a day and compromised the
flight-data recorder. So investigators had less data to rely on than is
usual in modern jetliner crashes and are still working on the final
wording of the report. The preliminary focus on pilot error could be
toned down, according to two people familiar with the details.
The cockpit voice recorder, which
survived intact, showed the pilots spent the last 25 seconds
unsuccessfully trying to restart the engines.
The paper pointed out though that
people familiar with the probe cautioned that an official accident
report hasn’t been released and investigation’s tentative conclusions
haven’t been reported and could still be revised. Muhtar Usman, the
commissioner of Nigeria’s Accident Investigation Bureau, said he hadn’t
yet heard results from the U.S. forensic labs.
“We have nothing to hide,” said Dana
spokesman Tony Usidamen, who declined to comment on the crash’s cause
until the report is completed. “We hope that the government will take
the decision to make the report public…. It may or may not affect how
the average traveler views the industry.”
A preliminary report issued last year
by Nigeria’s Accident Investigation Bureau didn’t say why the engines
shut down, the paper said. Some pilots and safety experts said crews
flying MD-80 series jets need to pay close attention to turning on
certain booster pumps and ensuring that valves controlling fuel flow
from various tanks are in the proper position, because mistakes can
result in one or both engines ending up starved of fuel.
“This is purely a case of human error,” said one Nigerian official with knowledge of the situation.
A spokeswoman for the U.S. National
Transportation Safety Board, which is helping in the investigation,
declined to comment. The NTSB typically is asked to help local
investigators when a U.S.-made plane is involved in a major accident.
Nigerian investigators have called the
crash one of the most bewildering in recent aviation history. They
spent last June and July focused on the possibility that bad fuel, or
even an obstruction as simple as a stray rag in the fuel tank, might
have caused two engines to fail nearly simultaneously.
“The fuel supply in Nigeria has been
probably audited a dozen times in the past couple weeks,” an industry
official involved in the fuel review said in June. “People are kicking
around obscure scenarios at this point.”
When the engines initially stopped
running, according to one person familiar with the probe, the pilots
pushed the controls to maximum thrust but the engines didn’t react. The
preliminary report said the crew radioed an emergency distress call to
controllers, reporting a “dual engine failure” and “negative response
from throttle.”
We’re not aware of that finding - AIB
The Accident Investigation Bureau
(AIB) told Daily Trust in Lagas yesterday the report is mere speculation
for now. The AIB spokesman Tunji Oketunbi, told our correspondent on
the phone that, the suggestion in World Street Journal is “mere
speculation.”
“We have not concluded the
investigations. We sent the engines of the MD-83 aircraft to the United
States for tear down analysis” and they are still being analysed he
said.
“So, that human error caused the crash
is not from the AIB and we are not aware of that finding. Until the
investigations are complete, we can’t say for certain, what caused the
Dana Air MD-83 crash” he noted. Asked if there are indicators from the
preliminary investigations as to the possible cause of the crash he said
he wouldn’t say if there are indicators or not but the evidences that
should have even given immediate indicators got destroyed in the fire.
“We are now looking at other avenues to finding out exactly what
happened and the engine tear down is one of the ways” he said.
“Do not forget, a lot of parties are
interested in the findings of what caused the Dana crash for safety
reasons and to forestall future occurrences. The aircraft engine
manufacturers are interested in the report, the aircraft manufacturers
are interested in the findings, and indeed the global aviation industry
is interested in the report for aviation safety” he said.
“People shouldn’t think we are
treating the investigation casually. The investigation has to be
thoroughly done and we will ensure just that” he assured.
When contacted on the matter, Dana Air
spokesman, Tony Usidemen, said since “AIB is yet to release its final
report, it is premature to comment on mere speculation.”
“You can be rest assured we will issue
an official statement once the AIB/government releases the final
report. But the theory that the accident may have been caused by human
error was collaborated by an industry expert who wouldn’t want his name
mentioned because of the sensitivity of the matter.
He told our correspondent that from
the information he got, there are strong indications the pilot of the
ill fated aircraft made some wrong decisions.
“I got it on good authority that the
first engine of the aircraft packed up 18 minutes after take. The second
one parked up 11 minutes before landing. The pilot had the option of an
air return immediately after the first engine packed up, just like
Med-View Airline did recently and averted a disaster. The pilot also had
the option of calling for an emergency landing at Ilorin Airport or
some other airport on his route but he chose to risk it to Lagos.
Unfortunately, he couldn’t make it to tell the story” he said.
“I think all airlines should take a
cue from the recent Med-Vie example were the pilot made an air return
minutes after it notice a surge in one of the aircraft’s engines. That
is the global standard,” he said.
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