oneworld

China probes Cathay's empty oxygen bottles to add to scrutiny

Cathay Pacific is under investigation by Chinese regulators after emergency oxygen bottles on three flights were found depleted or completely empty, compounding pressure on the Hong Kong airline from mainland authorities. Cabin crew from the flights have been grounded so they can help with the probe, Cathay told staff in a memo on Monday. As well as the Civil Aviation Administration of China, Hong Kong authorities and local police are also investigating, the note said. Pre-flight inspections discovered 13 oxygen canisters -- designed to be used by crew in an emergency depressurization of the cabin -- that were partially or fully discharged, Cathay said last week. The inquiry is another headache for the airline’s new chief executive officer, Augustus Tang, weeks after Chinese regulators threatened to bar Cathay from the mainland because some staff supported the Hong Kong protests. Cathay’s note to employees didn’t apportion blame for the depleted bottles, but said the probe is also drawing in ground staff, caterers, cleaners and engineers. It’s almost unheard of for a single airline to find so many canisters empty in such a short space of time. “This is quite unusual,” said Shukor Yusof, founder of aviation consulting firm Endau Analytics. “It’s hurting Cathay’s brand.”<br/>

KLM revealed as customer for two more 777-300ERs

KLM has ordered another pair of Boeing 777-300ER twinjets, the US airframer has disclosed. The aircraft – powered by General Electric GE90 engines – had previously been listed on the Boeing backlog but attributed to an unidentified customer. No delivery date has been given for the jets. KLM already operates 14 777-300ERs as well as 15 777-200ERs. Boeing values the agreement at $751 million at catalogue prices. The airframer says the carrier's order shows the "enduring appeal" of the aircraft.<br/>