Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2020 08:07 PM
  • Boeing Max to remain grounded in Canada: Garneau

The Boeing 737 Max aircraft will not be returning to Canadian skies just yet, despite being cleared for takeoff by U.S. regulators.

Federal Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Wednesday that Canada will impose different requirements than the U.S. before it lifts the grounding orders for the plane, including additional procedures on the flight deck and pre-flight and differences in training for flight operators.

“Our government remains committed to keeping Canadians, the travelling public, and the transportation system safe and secure,” Garneau said, adding that he expects the validation process to conclude “very soon.”

Garneau’s remarks followed a U.S. announcement that the Boeing 737 Max, which was involved in two mass casualty crashes in recent years, will be permitted to fly again once Boeing makes changes to the software and computer systems on each plane and provides training to pilots in flight simulators.

The planes have been grounded since March 2019 following the crashes of a Lion Air flight near Jakarta on Oct. 29, 2018, and an Ethiopian Airlines flight on March 10, 2019, killing a total of 346 people.

Among the casualties from the Ethiopian Airlines flight were 18 Canadians, including a professor at Carleton University in Ottawa; a conservationist from Orillia, Ont. an Edmonton woman and her five-year-old daughter.

A lengthy investigation by the U.S. Congress prompted criticism of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration for setting lax standards in approving the aircraft to fly and of Boeing executives, who Congress said compromised safety to maximize profits. The scrutiny led to the resignation of Boeing’s CEO, Dennis Muilenberg, who stepped down in December 2019.

Investigators found that both crashes were caused by faulty sensors that pushed the aircraft’s nose downward in flight. Boeing had devised anti-stall software to compensate for the plane’s tendency to tilt nose-up, but the system prevented pilots from regaining control when the sensors malfunctioned.

Government agencies around the world, including Transport Canada, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency and the FAA have been conducting independent processes for deciding whether to recertify the plane to fly.

Morgan Bell, a spokeswoman for WestJet, which operates 13 MAX aircraft, said the company’s planes will only return to service once it is certain they are safe.

“The work by Transport Canada and other independent regulators around the globe, in combination with our own preparation, processes and due diligence, gives us confidence in returning these aircraft to service once Transport Canada opens the skies to the Max,” Bell said.

Sunwing Airlines, which has four Max aircraft in its fleet, said it is working closely with Transport Canada to address the factors needed for the Max to return to service safely.

Air Canada, which has 24 Max aircraft in its fleet, didn’t immediately comment. In March, the airline said it would cancel an order for 11 Max jets amid the grounding order and ongoing questions about the aircraft’s safety.

Canada likely wants to require training procedures that will prevent confusion by pilots in case a similar incident occurs, said John Gradek, a lecturer at McGill University and the head of its Global Aviation Leadership Program. He added that when the Max was first approved, Canada likely relied on the FAA’s approval for its own certification, rather than conducting a thorough review of its own — normal protocol, he said, since the plane was manufactured in the U.S.

“I think Canada got burned the first time around,” Gradek said. “I think Canada really wants to make sure that [the Max] does meet the Canadian specifications, that Canada really wants to exert its sovereignty on certification.”

Even after the Max is cleared to fly in Canada, Boeing will have work to do to regain the public’s confidence that the plane is safe, Gradek said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Top court sides with Maple Leaf Foods

Top court sides with Maple Leaf Foods
In a decision today, the top court says Maple Leaf Foods did not owe the submarine sandwich outlets a duty of care under the law.

Top court sides with Maple Leaf Foods

Feds, some provinces have room to spend more: PBO

Feds, some provinces have room to spend more: PBO
Based on the budget officer's calculations, the government could increase spending, reduce taxes, or a combination of the two to the tune of $19 billion and still reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio over time to pre-pandemic levels.

Feds, some provinces have room to spend more: PBO

Economy added 84,000 jobs in October

Economy added 84,000 jobs in October
Nearly 450,000 were considered long-term unemployed last month, meaning they had been without a job for 27 weeks or more, with their ranks swelling by 79,000 in September and then 151,000 more in October.

Economy added 84,000 jobs in October

Public’s Help Sought in Locating Suspect with Canada Wide Warrant

Public’s Help Sought in Locating Suspect with Canada Wide Warrant
At approximately 10:50pm, on Wednesday, November 4, Transit Police officers checked a man in the area of Surrey Central Station who had an outstanding Canada-wide warrant for break and enter. When officers tried to arrest the man, he immediately began resisting the arrest and fighting with officers, twice breaking free, and eventually evading arrest.

Public’s Help Sought in Locating Suspect with Canada Wide Warrant

Ottawa's silence needed on U.S. election: experts

Ottawa's silence needed on U.S. election: experts
Trump claimed a triumph early Wednesday even though mail-in votes were still being legally counted, including in key swing states such as Pennsylvania, a process that could take days.

Ottawa's silence needed on U.S. election: experts

Arctic animals showing climate adaptation

Arctic animals showing climate adaptation
The paper combines — for the first time, the authors say — millions of data points on thousands of animals from different herds, flocks and 96 species into one archive.

Arctic animals showing climate adaptation