NEW DELHI: Air India stated on Thursday (Feb 5) it was investigating if its crew adopted all compliance procedures when a Boeing jet took off from London with a attainable fuel-switch defect, solely to be later grounded in India.
Reuters reported the airline’s investigation of Sunday’s incident, after reporting that Britain’s aviation authority had privately requested Air India for particulars of all upkeep actions earlier than the choice to take off.
Britain has given Air India every week’s deadline to submit an entire response, or face regulatory motion in opposition to it and its fleet of 33 Boeing 787s.
Authorities have stated pilots in London had noticed the gas management change didn’t keep latched within the “run” place on two makes an attempt, however was steady on a 3rd.
The crew determined to fly to India, the place the pilot reported a attainable “defect” on touchdown, forcing the grounding of the airplane for checks.
In a press release, Air India stated will probably be “following its security investigation protocol and take acceptable motion”, in response to a question from Reuters about whether or not the pilots had flagged considerations to British authorities earlier than takeoff.
It didn’t elaborate on attainable motion.
ISSUE REPORTED ON LANDING IN INDIA
A supply with direct data of the matter instructed Reuters Air India’s investigation would query the crew why they didn’t report the incident in London, and in the event that they felt it was protected to fly, why they reported it later in India.
India’s civil aviation authority didn’t instantly reply to queries from Reuters.
Gasoline switches, which regulate the circulate of jet gas to a airplane’s engines, had been on the centre of last year’s crash of an Air India Dreamliner within the western state of Gujarat that killed 260 and triggered tighter scrutiny of the airline.
After Sunday’s incident, Air India and Indian authorities have stated there have been no points with gas management switches on the airline’s Dreamliner fleet.
Britain’s watchdog has sought a “complete root-cause evaluation” of the incident and a “preventive motion plan”, nevertheless, to avert any recurrence throughout Air India’s Boeing 787 fleet, Reuters reported on Wednesday.
“The security of our passengers and crew stays Air India’s highest precedence,” the airline added in its assertion.

