What are airlines doing in response to Cathay Pacific's Airbus A350 engine failure

By Anna Chaberska and Alban Kacher

(Reuters) - Several airlines are carrying out precautionary inspections on their Airbus A350 fleets after Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific found 15 planes that needed fuel line repairs following the in-flight failure of an engine part.

The issue occurred on a five-year-old Airbus A350-1000, which uses Rolls-Royce (OTC:RYCEY )'s Trent XWB-97 engines, but some carriers are also inspecting the more popular A350-900 aircraft which use a different engine model.

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) on Thursday gave airlines between three and 30 days to carry out visual checks and measurements on the fuel houses in A350-1000 engines. The A350-900 is not affected.

Here is what airlines are doing, divided by the model of the aircraft:

A350-1000

Cathay Pacific, which has 48 A350 jets, identified 15 aircraft that required replacement of engine components that were set to be completed by Saturday. It did not specify which models were being repaired.

Japan Airlines (JAL), which has five new A350-1000s, said on Thursday it had inspected those engines and found no defects. It will do additional inspections on the aircraft based on a Service Bulletin issued by Rolls-Royce.

Qatar Airways said on Friday it was carrying out inspections of its 24 A350-1000s after it received a directive from EASA and Rolls-Royce.

UAE's Etihad Airways, which has five A350-1000s, said it was inspecting engines across its A350 fleet and had so far not found issues.

British Airways, which has 18 A350-1000s, and Virgin Atlantic, which operates 12, have not commented on the situation.

A350-900

A spokesperson for JAL said the Tokyo-based carrier had also carried out voluntary inspections of its A350-900 aircraft as a precaution and no problems were found.

Air China (OTC:AIRYY ), a major A350-900 operator, will perform general engine checks, reported Caixin, a Chinese business and economics publication.

Singapore Airlines (OTC:SINGY ), which has a fleet of 63 A350-900 planes, said it was inspecting the engines on its aircraft but there was no impact on flights.

Delta Air Lines (NYSE:DAL ), which has 30 A350-900s, said the airline runs its global operation "with the high standard of care for safety, reliability and care that we always do".



Thai Airways, which has 23 of them, said its technicians continuously review the situation and make engine checks regularly.



(This story has been refiled to fix the dateline)



Source: Investing.com

Останні публікації
Oklo target nearly doubled at Wedbush on AI-driven demand for nuclear energy
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Crypto markets lose steam after Trump's first policy move
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Combination of Google's TPU-DeepMind units may be worth $700 bn - DA Davidson
24.01.2025 - 18:00
British American Tobacco, Altria shares rise after menthol ban proposal dropped
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Morocco stocks higher at close of trade; Moroccan All Shares up 0.34%
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Commerzbank says no talks with UniCredit until specific proposal made
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Venture Global aims for $64 billion valuation at debut in test for energy IPOs
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Intuitive Machines stock surges on NASA contract award
24.01.2025 - 18:00
International Paper's $7.2 billion acquisition of DS Smith gets EU approval
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Short-term stock optimism soars among retail investors, AAII survey shows
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Venture Global shares likely to open up to 6% above IPO price
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Intuitive Surgical, American Express Stir Friday's Market Cap Stock Movers
24.01.2025 - 18:00
BMW joins Chinese EV makers in filing EU court challenge to tariffs
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Turkey stocks lower at close of trade; BIST 100 down 0.08%
24.01.2025 - 18:00
Diageo stock jumps on possible Guinness sale
24.01.2025 - 18:00

© Analytic DC. All Rights Reserved.

new
Аналіз ринку Як вплине завтра звіт NFP на курс долара США?