Dubai crash investigators focusing on pilot actions: Report

A Boeing 777-300 flight crash-landed at Dubai International Airport on Aug. 3, 2016. (Reuters file photo)

DUBAI: The UAE investigation into the 2016 Emirates crash in Dubai is focusing on pilot actions and has identified ways that air traffic control and flight crews can communicate better, an interim report said on Sunday.
The Boeing 777-300 flight from India, crashed on Aug. 3, 2016 after the pilots tried to pull out of a landing attempt.
The report raised the number of injured people to 30 from 24, but gave no reason for the increase. All 300 passengers and crew evacuated the plane but a firefighter died tackling the fire caused when it skidded along the runway on its fuselage.
Investigators were “working to determine and analyze the human performance factors that influenced flight crew actions during the landing and attempted go-around,” the report from from the UAE’s General Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) said.
An Emirates spokeswoman told Reuters it was reviewing its training and operational processes and procedures as part of its own ongoing internal investigation into the crash.
She declined to comment on whether Emirates believed pilot actions were a factor in the crash.
Unspecified “safety enhancements” have been identified by investigators related to communication between air traffic control and the flight crew, and with weather information shared with the flight crew, the report said.
A GCAA spokesman told Reuters the regulator was unable to provide specific information on the report because the investigation was still going on.
Investigators have previously said the aircraft was subjected to shifting winds as it came into land.
The report said investigators had found no pre-existing mechanical issues with the plane or its Rolls-Royce engines.
The crash forced Dubai International Airport, the world’s busiest for international travel, to temporarily close, and was the worst incident in Emirates’ 30-year history.
Analysts have suggested the cause of the crash should have been determined relatively quickly after the incident.
GCAA Director General Saif Mohammed Al-Suwaidi said in November the investigation would take two to three years.
Authorities previously acknowledged looking at wind shear, a sudden change in wind speed or direction, as affecting the flight. It also was a humid 49 degrees Celsius at the time of the crash. The hotter the weather, the harder it can be for engines to lift airplanes off the ground, experts say.
Another Dubai government-owned airline, discount carrier FlyDubai, suffered a March 2016 crash in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, that killed all 62 people aboard one of its 737-800 jetliners.