Thursday, September 12, 2024
FAA Boeing 787 inspections may disrupt 64,000 flights globally

FAA Boeing 787 inspections may disrupt 64,000 flights globally

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) recent directive requiring inspections of Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircraft is expected to potentially impact more than 18 million seats across around 64,000 flights worldwide over the next 30 days, according to data from Mabrian. Major airlines such as All Nippon Airways, Qatar Airways, American Airlines, United Airlines or Air Europa, among others will face significant challenges, potentially leading to global travel disruptions.

Barcelona, Spain, August 21st, 2024.- According to the global travel intelligence platform, Mabrian, more than 18 million seats in over 64,000 flights worldwide programmed for the next 30 days could be potentially affected by the mandatory inspections requested by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to 895 Boeing 787 Dreamliner aircrafts in operation worldwide, following a March incident involving a sudden mid-air plunge of a LATAM Airlines’ Boeing 787-9, resulting in injuries to over 50 passengers.

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The FAA announcement implies that inspections and corrective actions should be performed in the potentially loose or non-functional rocker switch caps or switch canover assemblies on the back of the Captain’s and First Officer’s seats of certain Boeing 787-8, 9, and –10 airplanes, currently operating worldwide. This malfunction is allegedly behind five similar reports, two still under investigation.

Mabrian, part of The Data Appeal Company, anticipates the impact of this aircraft recall based on the analysis* of the scheduled flights and seats in programmed routes for the next month, of all Boeing 787 aircrafts affected by the FAA’s Airworthiness Directive (AD), issued on August 20th, 2024.

Data shows that over 64,000 flights, equivalent to slightly more than 18 million seats, could be compromised; and 92% of such flights are scheduled in 787-8 and 787-9 models. In terms of availability, 58% of total seats affected are scheduled in 787-9 aircrafts, and over a third in 787-8 planes. “This mandatory inspection will not imply to land all planes at the same time, as airlines have 30 days to complete it and fix any malfunction, but it will pose a massive challenge in an already tight summer and post summer schedule, that could cause delays and cancellations worldwide”, says Carlos Cendra, Partner and Director of Maketing and Communications at Mabrian.

The air carriers that should have to cushion a larger impact derived from this FAA’s directive will be All Nippon Airways and Qatar Airways; as well as Hainan Airlines and Ethiopian Airlines.

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Among the list of the airlines that should have to manage their schedules in the next month to attend this mandatory inspection there are relevant Asian carriers such as Japan Airlines, Singapore Airlines, and China Southern Airlines; or key airlines catering to Middle East and Asia long-haul routes, such as Etihad Airways and Turkish Airlines. Moreover, world carriers that connect America and Europe, in particular, United Airlines, as well as American Airlines, Air Canada, LATAM Airlines, and Air Europa will also be forced to re-organize seats and flights in the coming 30 days.

Picture of Anastasiya Simsek

Anastasiya Simsek

Anastasiya Simsek started her journalism career in 2016 at Ukrainian TV-Channels: 24 Channel and 1+1 Media. Having worked across a number of different sectors, including news, medicine and lifestyle, she joined the Air Cargo Week editorial team in 2024. To share your news and exclusive insights, contact Anastasiya.Simsek@AirCargoWeek.com

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