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Kiwi Pilots Reassure Air Travellers, Need For Thorough Investigation

Kiwi Pilots Reassure Air Travellers, Need For Thorough Investigation

Scoopa day ago

The New Zealand Air Line Pilots' Association (NZALPA) have moved to assure kiwi travellers of the safety of air travel and the need to allow the air accident investigation process to take its course in the wake of the Air India flight 171 tragedy.
NZALPA President Andrew McKeen, also a 787 Pilot, said that the Association's thoughts were with the families and loved ones of the passengers and crew.
Through IFALPA, the pilot community worldwide has reached out to their colleagues at the Airline Pilots' Association of India to offer any support necessary.
President McKeen said the most important thing was to avoid speculation about the cause or causes of the accident and allow the investigation process to take its course. Conclusions and safety recommendations will be identified by the appropriate investigative bodies. Any lessons learned will be shared and changes made if necessary.
'In NZALPA's 80 years of representing professional pilots in New Zealand, we have found that taking the time to gather all facts and analyse all relevant information has assisted aviation in becoming the safest form of transportation in the world,' President McKeen says.
'New Zealand airlines also operate Boeing 787s but we remind passengers that thousands of flights occur daily without incident and there is no immediate cause for concern.
'NZALPA's pilots and air traffic controllers first priority is, and always will be, the safety of our members and the travelling public,' says President McKeen.

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Kiwi Pilots Reassure Air Travellers, Need For Thorough Investigation
Kiwi Pilots Reassure Air Travellers, Need For Thorough Investigation

Scoop

timea day ago

  • Scoop

Kiwi Pilots Reassure Air Travellers, Need For Thorough Investigation

The New Zealand Air Line Pilots' Association (NZALPA) have moved to assure kiwi travellers of the safety of air travel and the need to allow the air accident investigation process to take its course in the wake of the Air India flight 171 tragedy. NZALPA President Andrew McKeen, also a 787 Pilot, said that the Association's thoughts were with the families and loved ones of the passengers and crew. Through IFALPA, the pilot community worldwide has reached out to their colleagues at the Airline Pilots' Association of India to offer any support necessary. President McKeen said the most important thing was to avoid speculation about the cause or causes of the accident and allow the investigation process to take its course. Conclusions and safety recommendations will be identified by the appropriate investigative bodies. Any lessons learned will be shared and changes made if necessary. 'In NZALPA's 80 years of representing professional pilots in New Zealand, we have found that taking the time to gather all facts and analyse all relevant information has assisted aviation in becoming the safest form of transportation in the world,' President McKeen says. 'New Zealand airlines also operate Boeing 787s but we remind passengers that thousands of flights occur daily without incident and there is no immediate cause for concern. 'NZALPA's pilots and air traffic controllers first priority is, and always will be, the safety of our members and the travelling public,' says President McKeen.

'It reverberates': Air NZ boss on Air India tragedy
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timea day ago

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'It reverberates': Air NZ boss on Air India tragedy

More than 240 people have been killed when an Air India plane bound for London crashed moments after taking off from the city of Ahmedabad in India on Thursday (India time), authorities said. It's the world's worst aviation disaster in a decade and the first loss of life in a Boeing 787 Dreamliner. The police say the sole survivor managed to jump out an emergency exit. Air NZ chief executive Greg Foran told Morning Report he had been in touch with Air India's Kiwi chief executive Campbell Wilson and offered his company's support. He had also contacted Singapore Airlines which has a shareholding in Air India. ADVERTISEMENT The morning's headlines in 90 seconds including Air India crash, ferry still out of action, and ignoring TikTok KiwiSaver hacks. (Source: 1News) He expressed his condolences to colleagues in India dealing with the tragedy. "It reverberates, we're all impacted, it's passengers, it's all the staff who were involved. We've been working on it in the evening and offering whatever support we can." 'Not making enough lift' - watch interview with aviation expert on TVNZ+ Foran, who has just returned from several days in New Delhi, said he was up-to-date with what was happening in how the aviation industry was being developed in India. Both its major airlines, Air India and Indigo, had major expansion plans with a lot of airports being built and planes on order. "It's a burgeoning industry and it's really well run." ADVERTISEMENT The plane that crashed was a Dreamliner-8 while Air New Zealand had the slightly bigger Dreamliner-9. Air New Zealand got its first order of Dreamliners in 2014, more in 2017 and was awaiting delivery of another eight. "We've had a great run with that particular aircraft." The current ones had Trent Rolls-Royce engines while the new ones would have General Electric Gen-X engines, similar to that on the Air India plane. It was too early to speculate on whether it was an engine issue that caused the crash, Foran said. A massive "ecosystem" would be responding to what has happened in order to try and find out what has gone wrong with various regulators and companies involved. "Until people get a bit further into the investigation you don't want to speculate but I am very comfortable that the quality of what we are flying today and will fly tomorrow is at the standard required." ADVERTISEMENT However, if the regulators came back with new directives they would be incorporated into its operation. "Air New Zealand remains a very very safe airline," Foran said. Meanwhile, the New Zealand High Commission in New Delhi said it was responding to the event and was in touch with local authorities. It said it had no reason at this time to believe that any New Zealanders were on the flight.

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