Pilot error and airline violations were to blame for the July 2014 crash of TransAsia Airways Flight 222 in Penghu that killed 48 people, the Aviation Safety Council (ASC) said yesterday as it released the findings of its investigation into the crash.
The pilots’ repeated violations of standard operating procedures were indicative of an operational culture “in which high-risk practices were routine and considered normal,” the council said in its report.
The ATR 72-500 carrying 54 passengers and four crewmembers on a flight from Kaohsiung went down near Magong Airport on July 23, 2014. The 10 survivors all suffered injuries in the crash.
Photo: Liao Chen-huei, Taipei Times
Pilot Lee Yi-liang (李義良), who was 60 at the time, had 15 years of experience in flying civilian aircraft, while his copilot was 39-year-old Chiang Kuan-hsing (江冠興). Both died in the crash.
The council said it found nine problems pertaining to flight operations, including the pilots’ failure to comply with the published procedures regarding the minimum descent altitude (MDA).
Lee took the aircraft below the MDA of 330 feet (100.6m) without obtaining the required visual references, and as the plane continued to descend, the pilots did not detect and correct that hazardous path in time, suggesting that they were not aware of the aircraft’s position, it said.
The weather was also a probable cause of the tragedy, as Penghu was being affected by the outer rim of Typhoon Matmo, and heavy rain and abrupt changes in wind speed and direction contributed to the poor control of the plane, the council said.
The captain was “likely overconfident in his flying skills,” which might have led to his decision to descend below 330ft without an appreciation of the safety risks, while a fatigue analysis indicated that his performance had probably been affected by fatigue, it said.
The report also mentioned a number of risks that might have contributed to the accident, including the tower’s failure to inform the pilot that the runway visual range values had decreased from 1,600m to 800m and then to about 500m.
While that may have influenced the pilot’s decision on whether to continue the approach, that piece of information was not vital enough to cause the tragedy, council Executive Director Thomas Wang (王興中) said.
If the pilot had followed standard operating procedures, he might have had a chance to turn around when he reached the MDA, Wang said.
The minimum visibility standard for landing at Magong Airport is 1,600m.
The report said the airline needed to take responsibility for its safety management.
“TransAsia Airways had not developed a safety management system implementation plan,” the council said. “This led to a disorganized, nonsystematic, incomplete and ineffective implementation, which made it difficult to establish robust and resilient safety management capabilities and functions.”
The council made 10 recommendations, including the need for TransAsia to review its safety protocols, pilot training program and hiring practices to reduce “imminent risks.”
It also said the airline needed to hire more staff, including flight training and safety management personnel as well as pilots.
The report casts a spotlight once again on pilot training and decision-making at TransAsia, which lost an ATR 72-600 in another fatal crash just less than seven months after the Magong tragedy, when the plane crashed soon after taking off from Taipei, killing 43 passengers and crew.
TransAsia yesterday said it respected the results of the investigation and pledged to strive for better safety controls.
“Flight safety comes first,” TransAsia chairman Lin Ming-sheng (林明昇) said, adding that the airline has implemented measures such as introducing foreign experts to overhaul its flight safety operation.
Left-Handed Girl (左撇子女孩), a film by Taiwanese director Tsou Shih-ching (鄒時擎) and cowritten by Oscar-winning director Sean Baker, won the Gan Foundation Award for Distribution at the Cannes Critics’ Week on Wednesday. The award, which includes a 20,000 euro (US$22,656) prize, is intended to support the French release of a first or second feature film by a new director. According to Critics’ Week, the prize would go to the film’s French distributor, Le Pacte. "A melodrama full of twists and turns, Left-Handed Girl retraces the daily life of a single mother and her two daughters in Taipei, combining the irresistible charm of
A Philippine official has denied allegations of mistreatment of crew members during Philippine authorities’ boarding of a Taiwanese fishing vessel on Monday. Philippine Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) spokesman Nazario Briguera on Friday said that BFAR law enforcement officers “observed the proper boarding protocols” when they boarded the Taiwanese vessel Sheng Yu Feng (昇漁豐號) and towed it to Basco Port in the Philippines. Briguera’s comments came a day after the Taiwanese captain of the Sheng Yu Feng, Chen Tsung-tun (陳宗頓), held a news conference in Pingtung County and accused the Philippine authorities of mistreatment during the boarding of
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is pushing for residents of Kinmen and Lienchiang counties to acquire Chinese ID cards in a bid to “blur national identities,” a source said. The efforts are part of China’s promotion of a “Kinmen-Xiamen twin-city living sphere, including a cross-strait integration pilot zone in China’s Fujian Province,” the source said. “The CCP is already treating residents of these outlying islands as Chinese citizens. It has also intensified its ‘united front’ efforts and infiltration of those islands,” the source said. “There is increasing evidence of espionage in Kinmen, particularly of Taiwanese military personnel being recruited by the
88.2 PERCENT INCREASE: The variants driving the current outbreak are not causing more severe symptoms, but are ‘more contagious’ than previous variants, an expert said Number of COVID-19 cases in the nation is surging, with the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) describing the ongoing wave of infections as “rapid and intense,” and projecting that the outbreak would continue through the end of July. A total of 19,097 outpatient and emergency visits related to COVID-19 were reported from May 11 to Saturday last week, an 88.2 percent increase from the previous week’s 10,149 visits, CDC data showed. The nearly 90 percent surge in case numbers also marks the sixth consecutive weekly increase, although the total remains below the 23,778 recorded during the same period last year,