What is known about the flight?
QZ8501 was
scheduled to depart from Indonesia’s second city, Surabaya, at 5.20am
local time, arriving 2 hours 10 minutes later at Singapore, the main
aviation hub for South East Asia. There were 155 passengers, two pilots,
an engineer and four cabin crew on board.
There is confusion
about the nationalities involved: Air Asia's most recent statement says
the nationalities of passengers and crew onboard are: 156 Indonesian, 3
South Korean and a single citizen from each of Singapore, Malaysia and
France. But the Foreign Office has said that one British citizen is
believed to be on board.
The Airbus A320 departed a few minutes
late and was in level flight when Indonesian Air Traffic Control lost
contact with it 41 minutes into the flight.
There have been reports
about the pilot having asked for an “unusual” routing - though from the
records of Air Traffic Control it appears the crew wanted to deviate
from their track and climb to avoid a thunderstorm.
The airline says:
“The aircraft was on the submitted flight plan route and was requesting
deviation due to en-route weather before communication with the aircraft
was lost”.
What possible causes will investigators be looking for?
At
present most observers presume it to be an accident. Losses of aircraft
while in the cruise are unusual, and there will be particular focus on
the weather at the time. Scott Hamilton, of the well-respected Leeham
News and Comment website, said: “Investigators will put weather
conditions at the top of their list of areas to probe.
They will
attempt to determine whether there was a high altitude upset due to
turbulence that caused the plane to lose control; whether the plane was
intact when it presumably crashed into the sea or whether it came apart
in flight, and if so whether this possibility was caused by stresses
beyond design limits. Investigators will attempt to determine whether
the plane was struck by lightning, causing a chain of events leading to a
crash.”
What’s the background of Air Asia?
The
airline is based in Malaysia and has been one of the great aviation
success stories - building a south-east Asian version of easyJet, flying
a busy, high-frequency network in a highly populated part of the world.
It was a small, failing airline in 2001 when it was bought, in the
aftermath of 9/11, by the colourful Malaysian businessman called Tony
Fernandes, who’s been given advice and inspiration by Sir Richard
Branson.
He’s also the majority owner of Queen’s Park Rangers
football club and the chain of Tune low-cost hotels. The company
describes itself as “not so much an airline operator but more of a
people company that happens to be in the airline business.” Until
no-frills flying took hold in the region, South East Asia was the
preserve of national carriers such as Malaysia Airlines and Garuda
Indonesia. With Air Asia and its rivals, including Tiger, offering much
lower fares, the low-cost revolution caught the public imagination.
While a long-haul link between London and Kuala Lumpur was dropped as
unprofitable, the airline has thrived on its regional network. It will
carry nearly 50 million passengers this year.
Air Asia’s HQ is
based in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, but which like easyJet
operates right across the region. It has a number of subsidiaries such
as Air Asia Thailand and Indonesia Air Asia - the offshoot that operated
flight QZ 8501.
Mr Fernandes is currently on his way to Surabaya,
where the flight originated and where most of the passengers are from.
He tweeted: “We put our hope in the SAR [search-and-rescue] operation
and thank the Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysian governments.”
And the aircraft?
It’s
a six-year-old Airbus A320, delivered new in 2008 to Indonesia Air
Asia. The A320 model first flew in 1987 and has sold very well since
then, with easyJet and British Airways among the airlines that use it
and its derivatives, the A318, A319 and A321. The jet has a formidably
good safety record; in its history just seven have been lost in
passenger service. The most recent crash was six years ago in Honduras.
Many Indonesian airlines are banned from Europe because of safety concerns. Is Indonesia Air Asia on that list?
No.
It is one of five airlines specifically excluded from the blacklist.
The EU has concerns about Indonesia’s airline regulators, but believes
that Indonesia Air Asia maintains the highest standards of safety.
Air
Asia is a budget airline - which could lead to speculation about
whether costs were cut in a manner that might endanger safety?
There
is absolutely no evidence that Air Asia or any other low-cost airline
has done anything to compromise safety. Until now, Air Asia - like many
other budget carriers - has had a faultless safety record.
The aircraft is the third belonging to airlines based in Malaysia that has been lost this year. Is that significant?
It
has indeed been a tragic year, with the loss - still unexplained - of
Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 in March, the shooting down of flight
MH17 in eastern Ukraine in July, and now QZ8501. But no conclusions can
be drawn - the first two disasters were unconnected, and there is no
indication that QZ8501 has any connection apart from that awful
coincidence. Whether or not there are survivors from QZ8501, 2014 has
been the worst year of this decade so far in terms of passenger
aviation.
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Sunday, 28 December 2014
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AirAsia flight QZ8501 missing: Q&A - what is known about the flight and what possible causes will be investigated?
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