South Korea’s deadliest aviation disaster on home soil — which killed all but two of the 181 people aboard a Jeju Air Co flight in December 2024 — was caused by cost-cutting decisions during airport construction that were concealed for 16 years, a government audit found.
The operators of Muan International Airport in the country’s southwest opted against costly ground leveling and scrapped plans to use collapsible materials for a structure housing key navigation equipment, the South Korean Board of Audit and Inspection said in a 300-page report released late on Tuesday.
Instead, they built a rigid concrete wall at the end of the runway.
Photo: Reuters
The Boeing 737-800, operating as Jeju Air Flight 2216, overran the runway during an emergency landing, struck the wall and erupted into flames.
Between 2008 and 2024, officials from the South Korean Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport falsified documents to state that the structure was made of breakable materials, the audit found.
The ministry also reduced the size of the runway end safety area in 2013 rather than remove the wall, it said.
The findings are likely to fuel fresh controversy over aviation oversight in a country long regarded as having strong air-safety standards, after an initial report in January last year focused on bird strikes. The crash has already prompted a sweeping review of airport infrastructure nationwide, leading authorities to revise designs and remove similar embankments at several other airports.
Calls to Jeju Air and Muan airport went unanswered.
The ministry in a statement said that it “humbly” accepts the audit results and is working to improve the embankments at Muan and four other airports.
A government-commissioned computer simulation released earlier this year found that the 179 passengers and crew killed in the disaster could have survived had the barrier been made of frangible materials designed to break apart on impact.
The ministry was aware that the wall did not comply with international recommendations requiring runway end safety areas to be free of rigid obstacles, the report said.
“The Ministry of Land reduced construction costs at certain regional airports by introducing longitudinal slopes to minimize earthwork volumes,” the government’s audit said.
At Muan, steeper slopes were applied to the runway and runway end safety area than are in operation at South Korea’s main Incheon International Airport, near Seoul.
That resulted in embankments rising above ground level, and concrete foundations for the localizer antennas were installed within those embankments.
A consortium operating the airport had initially planned to install a collapsible structure for the localizer system, but by the time the airport opened in 2007, a concrete wall had been erected to elevate the equipment, which must sit higher than the runway’s highest point, the audit said.
Leveling the sloped terrain was deemed too expensive.
South Korea’s air force yesterday apologized for a 2021 midair collision involving two fighter jets, a day after auditors said the pilots were taking selfies and filming during the flight and held them responsible for the accident. “We sincerely apologize to the public for the concern caused by the accident that occurred in 2021,” an air force spokesman told a news conference, adding that one of the pilots involved had been suspended from flying duties, received severe disciplinary action and has since left the military. The apology followed a report released on Wednesday by the South Korean Board of Audit and Inspection,
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