PDA

View Full Version : Brazil radar outage forces flights back to U.S.



AirtrafficController
2007-07-21, 08:29 PM
SAO PAULO, Brazil - A radar failure over the Amazon forced Brazil to turn back or ground a string of international flights Saturday, deepening a national aviation crisis just hours after the president unveiled safety measures prompted by the country’s deadliest air disaster.

Further shaking Brazilians’ confidence, authorities said they had mistaken a piece of the fuselage from Tuesday’s accident for the flight recorder and sent it to a laboratory for analysis.

The radar outage from midnight to 2:30 a.m., which Brazilian media said was apparently caused by an electrical problem, forced numerous planes heading to Brazil to return to their points of origin and make unscheduled landings at airports from Puerto Rico to Chile.

“This is total chaos here. I have never seen anything like it and it makes me feel very unsafe,” said Eli Rocha, 52, of Oklahoma City, who was trying board a flight to Dallas on Saturday at Sao Paulo’s international airport. The flight was crowded with weary Americans arriving on other delayed or diverted flights.

The confusion followed a nationally televised speech by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who tried to calm the nation Friday night by announcing new safety measures and saying authorities will build a new airport in Sao Paulo, where an Airbus A320 operated by TAM Airlines crashed, killing 191 people.

All 187 people aboard and at least four on the ground died when the jetliner raced down the runway, skipped over a crowded highway and exploded in a fireball that was still smoldering three days later. Many experts have said that the short, rain-slicked runway could have contributed to the disaster at the downtown Congonhas airport, Brazil’s busiest.

Silva’s speech Friday night was his first public pronouncement about the crash except for a brief statement.

Our aviation system, in spite of the investments we have made in expansion and modernization of almost all Brazilian airports, is passing through difficulties,” Silva said. “The security of our aviation system is compatible with all the international standards. We cannot lose sight of this.”

Silva said aviation officials will limit the number of flights and restrict the weight of planes traveling into Congonhas airport and that the location of the new airport will be chosen within 90 days.

But Sao Paulo’s Mayor Gilberto Kassab told reporters Saturday that building a new airport, which could take between five and 10 years, was not a priority for the city, which would instead seek to claim houses around Congonhas airport as eminent domain in order to lengthen runways.

Also Saturday, officials said they had mistakenly sent part of the plane’s fuselage to the United States, thinking it was the flight recorder.

Gen. Jorge Kersul Filho, head of the air force’s accident prevention division, told reporters in Sao Paulo that the real flight recorder had been located early Saturday in the wreckage and would be sent to Washington for analysis, a process expected to take several days.

The radar problem forced American Airlines to divert 13 Brazil-bound planes that had departed from New York, Miami and Dallas, said company spokeswoman Mary Frances ***an.

Two American Airlines flights from Sao Paulo to Miami made unscheduled landings in the jungle city of Manaus, said Celso Gick, a spokesman for Brazilian airport authority Infraero. Brazilian media reported that another American Airlines flight landed in Santiago, Chile.

Delta Airlines spokeswoman Thonnia Lee said six of its flights were also diverted — three from the U.S. and three from Brazil. Flight 121 from New York was diverted to San Juan, Puerto Rico, before refueling and taking off again for Sao Paulo, arriving more than four hours late.

Jose dos Santos, a 43-year-old cafe owner, was aboard that flight when the crew announced Brazil was not letting airplanes enter its airspace because of the radar failure.

“I was saying, ’Oh my God, my life is over!’ I was in a panic, all I could think about was the Gol jet that crashed in the Amazon last year,” Santos said, referring to the September crash of a Gol Airlines Boeing 737 over the rainforest that killed all 154 people aboard.

Four United Airlines flights were also canceled as a result of the outage, spokeswoman Robin Urbanski said. In addition, Brazil’s Globo TV reported on its Web site that Brazil-bound flights from Colombia, Panama and Venezuela were affected.

The September Gol crash in the Amazon was the country’s worst air disaster until Tuesday’s accident and it exposed widespread problems with the country’s air traffic control system.

It also touched off months of work slowdowns by air traffic controllers protesting precarious working conditions. Congressional investigations turned up holes in the country’s radar coverage; antiquated equipment and flight controllers with only rudimentary knowledge of English.

Brazilian, French and U.S. investigators say it is too early to determine the cause of Tuesday’s crash. Analysis of the recorded cockpit conversations is not expected until next week.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19885944/

PhilDernerJr
2007-07-21, 09:36 PM
What is up with Brazil? I honestly expect more from them. They have such potential.

T-Bird76
2007-07-21, 09:53 PM
What is up with Brazil? I honestly expect more from them. They have such potential.

Phil our radars have gone down to, New York Center's radar has gone down recently, I've been out in LA when LA center has gone down. I was in Vegas when LA Center went down because a SUV ran into some power station and took out the power for LA Center. We really don't have the right to say squat when our own ATC system is 30 years old. I expect more from us as we have allot more potential then Brazil.

hiss srq
2007-07-21, 11:19 PM
Brazil though has internal issues with incompetence riddleing the entire nation and that does not only go for the aviation side. The have the cart before the horse down there. I say this from experince and the fact that when I do work for my father and deal with South America in general I find a lack of competnece or standard there.

bonanzabucks
2007-07-22, 03:52 PM
What is up with Brazil? I honestly expect more from them. They have such potential.

In Brazil, there is a saying: "Brazil is the country of the future and always will be."