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Thu, Oct 18, 2007

Rosenker Says NTSB Remains Focused On Cargo Airline Safety

Notes Fires Are Still A Potential Risk

In a speech Wednesday night before the Cargo Airline Association in Washington, DC, National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Mark V. Rosenker reiterated the agency's continuing interest in cargo airline safety, noting that while the industry has a good safety record there are improvements that still must be made.

Rosenker said the cargo industry can take pride in having suffered only three fatal crashes in the last 10 years, given the many thousands of operations they fly every year. However, cargo fires still remain a problem that the industry must address.

Cargo aircraft are required only to have a fire detection system, not a fire suppression system, for in-flight cargo fire protection. The NTSB recommended in 1998 that the Federal Aviation Administration explore the possibility of requiring such systems... but the Board says the FAA has declined to require them, citing the added weight such a system would provide.

"The Safety Board continues to encourage the FAA to evaluate currently available systems and promote new technology to reduce weight, increase reliability and create a system whose cost will encourage operators to install them," Rosenker said. In fact, he added, a major cargo carrier has introduced such a system into its aircraft that meets all these criteria.

Undeclared hazardous materials and the lack of airline systems to provide emergency responders consolidated, specific information about the identity, hazard class, quantity and location of all hazardous materials on an aircraft are also continuing concerns of the Safety Board.

Rosenker also noted the NTSB is completing its investigation into a serious cargo aircraft fire in Philadelphia last year. As ANN reported, a DC-8 flying for UPS caught fire while on approach to land at Philadelphia International Airport. The aircraft's three-man crew was able to escape the burning plane.

Investigators soon focused their investigation into the February 8, 2006 incident on the transport of lithium-ion batteries. The Board will consider a final report on that accident at a public Board meeting in December.

FMI: Read The Chairman's Speech

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