Washington, Feb 4 : US safety regulators are nowhere near finishing an investigation
into a battery fire on the Boeing Co 787 Dreamliner, a top official said,
raising the prospect of a prolonged grounding for the aircraft.
Deborah
Hersman, chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, made clear that
investigators have found a series of "symptoms" in the battery damaged in a
January 7 fire in Boston, but not the underlying cause of the problem. She also
said the agency would be looking at the design of the battery compartment area
of the plane and whether the certification standards had been strong
enough.
The comments were seen by some safety experts within the
aerospace industry as a clear signal that this is no longer just a teething
issue for the new plane.
That will raise questions about the financial
impact for Boeing, which is still running its assembly lines and backing up
aircraft to be delivered, and for airlines, many of which counted on getting the
futuristic 787 for their expansion plans.
"We are early in our
investigation, we have a lot of activities to undertake," Hersman told a news
conference.
"This is an unprecedented event. We are very concerned. We do
not expect to see fire events on board aircraft. This is a very serious air
safety concern."
She rebuffed multiple questions on how long the
investigation would take, making clear it could be weeks or more. She also would
not say when the 787 would fly again, which is in the hands of the Federal
Aviation Administration.
Former NTSB Chairman Mark Rosenker said the
briefing made it clear the investigators had come up short in their hunt for the
cause of the battery fire.
"It's going to take them longer," he said in
an interview. "Weeks, not days."
Richard Aboulafia, aerospace analyst
with the Virginia-based Teal Group, said the NTSB briefing was a sobering
reminder that investigators have not made much headway on finding a cause for
the battery problems.
"It was hard to find a lot of optimism on the call.
It sounds like they're still in the middle of a lot of hard work and a lot of
mysteries," Aboulafia said. "It just wasn't encouraging. Fire is the last thing
you want on an airplane."
The 787 has been grounded worldwide since an
All Nippon Airways plane made an emergency landing in Japan on January 16 after
a battery incident, which Hersman said may or may not have been a
fire.
That emergency landing came after a fire occurred on a Japan
Airlines Co Ltd 787 on the tarmac in Boston.
In a statement, Boeing said
it was cooperating with regulators and had teams of "hundreds of engineering and
technical experts" working on the situation.
"Boeing is eager to see both
investigative groups continue their work and determine the cause of these
events, and we support their thorough resolution," the company said, adding it
was not permitted to comment directly on the ongoing
investigations.
Still, Boeing shares are actually up 1.3 percent since
regulators said the plane - full of high-tech innovations that are supposed to
be a model for future aviation - could not fly.
At least one customer,
Poland's LOT, has already raised the prospect of seeking compensation for its
losses. Another, China's Hainan Airlines Co Ltd, said this week it was
disappointed in the delays and that its expansion plans had been affected as a
result.
Rosenker, the former NTSB official, noted that other new planes
had problems when they were introduced, but not fires, which makes this
situation stand out.
"Fire is something you don't fool with," he said.
"You've got to understand that, particularly given the short period of time the
aircraft has been flying."
Boeing has said in the past that, because of
their chemical composition, these batteries are difficult to extinguish once
they catch fire. As such, the plane is designed to contain fires while they burn
themselves out.
Hersman, talking to reporters after the news conference,
confirmed that there is no fire suppression system in the area where the battery
burned, nor any way to access it in-flight.
Asked if the lack of a fire
suppression system in the battery compartment was a design flaw, she said:
"We'll certainly be looking at the design and we'll be looking at the
certification standards to determine if they were robust enough."
If
regulators do decide design changes are needed, that could have implications for
Boeing's European rival Airbus and its future A350 jetliner.
"We believe
so far we have a robust design, however we will draw the lessons from the 787,"
Airbus Chief Executive Fabrice Bregier said at the World Economic Forum in
Davos.
Billed as Europe's response to the Dreamliner, the A350 is due to
enter service next year using lithium-ion batteries, but without the same
reliance on electrical systems as the 787, something Airbus says will put less
burden on the batteries.
However, Airbus has so far declined to comment
on how it would tackle a battery fire if one did break out on board.
FAA
and NTSB inspectors visited a UTC Aerospace Systems plant in Phoenix, although a
company spokesman declined to say what they focused or how long they would be at
the plant. UTC makes the aircraft's auxiliary power unit.
Fiona Greig, a
spokeswoman for Securaplane, which makes the battery charging unit and start
power unit, said its equipment was tested and worked as it should. She declined
comment when asked about the issues mentioned in those units by the
NTSB.
The 787 program was already years behind schedule before last
week's grounding, which means Boeing cannot deliver newly manufactured planes to
customers.
That means customers such as United Continental Holdings Inc
may have to wait even longer for planes on order. The company's United Airlines
already flies six Dreamliners.
"History teaches us that all new aircraft
types have issues and the 787 is no different," United Continental Chairman and
Chief Executive Jeff Smisek said during the carrier's earnings conference call.
"We continue to have confidence in the aircraft and in Boeing's ability to fix
the issues, just as they have done on every other new aircraft model they've
produced."
Smisek said that the carrier still expects to take delivery of
two more 787s in the second half of the year.
Boeing has already
delivered 50 of the 787s. Around half have been in operation in Japan, but
airlines in India, South America, Poland, Qatar and Ethiopia are also flying the
planes, as is U.S. carrier United.
The grounding of the Dreamliner, an
advanced carbon-composite aircraft with a list price of $207 million, has
already forced hundreds of flight cancellations
worldwide.
Ends
SA/EN
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787 probe far from complete, regulator "very concerned"
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