Engine mechanical failure may have caused Air China plane’s emergency landing: Airline
An engine mechanical failure may have been behind the fire that forced an Air China flight from Chengdu, in Sichuan province, to make an emergency landing in Singapore on Sunday. This is according to the airline’s initial assessment of the incident, China’s flag carrier said in a post on Chinese social media platform Weibo at about 1am on Monday. Further investigations are under way. Air China said the nine crew members on board flight CA403 handled the incident properly and according to procedure. The pilots of the flight, which left Chengdu’s Tianfu International Airport at 11.05am on Sunday, declared an emergency and requested priority landing at Changi Airport at around 3.59pm after reporting smoke in the plane’s forward cargo hold and lavatory. After the plane landed on Changi Airport’s Runway 3 at around 4.15pm, the aircraft’s emergency slides were deployed for passengers to evacuate. Air China said the 146 passengers on board were cooperative, which allowed for a successful evacuation.The Airport Emergency Service responded immediately to the incident and put out a fire in the left engine at about 4.25pm. Air China said in its Weibo post: “With the assistance of Changi Airport, work to re-accommodate the passengers has been completed. We sincerely apologise to the affected passengers.” The emergency landing led to one of the runways at Changi Airport being closed for almost three hours. This delayed flights leaving and arriving at the airport. One aircraft was diverted to Batam, Indonesia, during the runway’s closure, but the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) and Changi Airport Group did not say how many other flights were affected by the incident.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2023-09-12/star/engine-mechanical-failure-may-have-caused-air-china-plane2019s-emergency-landing-airline
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/logo.png
Engine mechanical failure may have caused Air China plane’s emergency landing: Airline
An engine mechanical failure may have been behind the fire that forced an Air China flight from Chengdu, in Sichuan province, to make an emergency landing in Singapore on Sunday. This is according to the airline’s initial assessment of the incident, China’s flag carrier said in a post on Chinese social media platform Weibo at about 1am on Monday. Further investigations are under way. Air China said the nine crew members on board flight CA403 handled the incident properly and according to procedure. The pilots of the flight, which left Chengdu’s Tianfu International Airport at 11.05am on Sunday, declared an emergency and requested priority landing at Changi Airport at around 3.59pm after reporting smoke in the plane’s forward cargo hold and lavatory. After the plane landed on Changi Airport’s Runway 3 at around 4.15pm, the aircraft’s emergency slides were deployed for passengers to evacuate. Air China said the 146 passengers on board were cooperative, which allowed for a successful evacuation.The Airport Emergency Service responded immediately to the incident and put out a fire in the left engine at about 4.25pm. Air China said in its Weibo post: “With the assistance of Changi Airport, work to re-accommodate the passengers has been completed. We sincerely apologise to the affected passengers.” The emergency landing led to one of the runways at Changi Airport being closed for almost three hours. This delayed flights leaving and arriving at the airport. One aircraft was diverted to Batam, Indonesia, during the runway’s closure, but the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) and Changi Airport Group did not say how many other flights were affected by the incident.<br/>