wazamba Bird strike concerns at airports raised after deadly plane crash

admin 2025-01-04 13:13 7game casino 103

The wreckage of Jeju Air flight 7C 2216 is seen at Muan International Airport in South Jeolla Province on Monday. (Yonhap via The Korea Herald/Asia News Network)

Sunday’s deadly plane crash set off a wave of concern over birds disrupting the safe operations of flights, with a bird strike suspected as the possible cause behind one of the deadliest aviation tragedies in South Korean history.

In the aftermath of Jeju Air flight 7C 2216’s crash, it was revealed that a government-commissioned report in 2020 had warned the government of bird strike issues for Muan International Airport in South Jeolla Province, the site of the accident that left 179 dead of the 181 passengers and crew.

Article continues after this advertisement

The report specified there is “substantial danger of bird strike when an airplane takes off or lands” at the airport, and called for a measure to reduce such risks. The report was conducted to evaluate the environmental effects of a government plan to extend the airport’s runway from 2,800 meters to 3,160 meters by 2025.

FEATURED STORIES GLOBALNATION BI execs tried to secure bail for Tony Yang – Hontiveros GLOBALNATION UAE light plane crash leaves pilot, co-pilot dead – aviation authority GLOBALNATION 'Bird stuck in wing,' passenger on crashed plane says in texts to family

READ: All but 2 feared dead after South Korea plane crashes with 181 aboard 

Article continues after this advertisement

It specified that Muan International Airport is near the known habitat of migrating birds, and that the newly extended runway overlaps with the birds’ migration route. The research revealed that three known habitats were adjacent to the airport, with two on-site inspections finding 1,278 birds and 1,760 birds in the area, respectively.

Article continues after this advertisement

Muan is not the only airport near habitats of migrating birds, as similar issues ail Gimpo International Airport in Seoul, Busan’s Gimhae International Airport and even Incheon Airport, the main gateway to the country.

Article continues after this advertisement

This is due to the fact that birds prefer areas that are optimal for long-distance flight, which coincides with being suitable for commercial flight, according to a 2020 Korea Environment Institute report on risk management for bird and plane collisions.

lotsa slots casino games

“Airplanes and birds share a common trait of ‘flight,’ which means an optimal place for an airport is also an optimal place for (migratory) birds to live,” the report stated.

Article continues after this advertisement

READ: What we know about Jeju Air plane crash in South Korea 

Some portion of the land where Incheon Airport is located used to be mudflats, populated by many migrating birds. As such, construction of the airport faced concerns about malicious effects on the environment.

Over two decades after the airport opened, birds and airplanes share the airspace over the airport, causing considerable safety risk.

Bird strikes on the rise

There has been an increase in the number of cases of birds colliding with airplanes in recent years.

Birds collided with airplanes in 623 occasions from 2019 to the first half of this year, according to government data revealed by Rep. Jeon Yong-gi of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea. The number went from 108 in 2019 to 76 in 2020 — when air traffic decreased drastically due to the COVID-19 pandemic — and rose back to 109 in 2021, before further rising to 131 in 2022 and 152 in 2023.

For Muan International Airport specifically, there have been 10 cases since 2019, not counting Sunday’s accident, the cause of which has not been confirmed yet. It had among the fewest bird strikes out of all airports in South Korea, but its 11,004 flights in that period were also far fewer than other bigger airports.

By percentage, 0.09 percent of all flights at Muan International Airport were subject to a bird strike from 2019, which is the highest out of all the airports. In comparison, flights at Jeju International Airport stood a 0.013 percent change of colliding with a bird, while Gimhae International Airport sat at 0.018 percent in the same period.

Only two of the confirmed bird strike cases this year across the country had actually led to any damages, and both cases had no associated deaths, according to Korea Airports Corp. But bird strikes could completely cripple a plane, as evidenced by the 2009 midair collision of US Airways flight 1549 with a flock of birds in New York, better known as the “Miracle on the Hudson” that ended with pilot “Sully” Sullenberger landing the plane with no fatalaties on the Hudson River.

A mourner cries while paying respects to victims of Sunday’s Jeju Air flight 7C 2216 crash, at a joint memorial in Muan, South Jeolla Province, Monday. (Yonhap via The Korea Herald/Asia News Network)

Not enough monitoring for bird strikes at Muan?

Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport regulations state that a single runway operated for nine hours or less requires a minimum of four officials for the purpose of preventing bird strikes by shooing away nearby birds. A commercial airport with fewer than 5,000 flights a year can reduce that number to two, as in the case of Muan International Airport.

But the Herald Business newspaper reported that only one person was working on bird strike prevention duties at Muan at the time of the accident. A Korea Airports Corp. report shows that the airport has four people for the job, divided into three teams working in shifts.

The 50-year-old business entered administration in February, which led to FRP Advisory being brought in to try to salvage part of the group.

In separate advisories on Monday, Seaoil, PetroGazz, CleanFuel, Caltex, and Shell Pilipinas said the price of gasoline would decrease by P1.55 a liter.

The number of officials allocated to bird strike prevention duties at the airport in Muan is substantially smaller than the reported 40 at Incheon, 23 at Gimpo and 20 on Jeju Island.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again. Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

SIGN ME UP

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

The Transportation Ministry is currently conducting an investigation into determining the exact cause behind the crash of Jeju Air flight 7C 2216, which killed 179 of the 181 people onboard. While it is unclear if a bird strike was responsible for the crashwazamba, possibly lax bird monitoring at Muan International Airport is suspected of contributing to the tragedy.

READ NEXT Crisis after crisis: Plane crash tests South Korea’s act... BI execs tried to secure bail for Tony Yang – Hontiveros EDITORS' PICK Alex Eala reaches Canberra tournament main draw Marcos signs P6.3 trillion 2025 national budget, vetoes P194 billion PCG: Over 38, 000 passengers monitored in ports ahead of New Year's Eve Kanlaon Volcano update: 6 ash emissions, 23 volcanic quakes in 24 hours MIFF 2025: 10 Filipino films to take spotlight in Hollywood MOST READ Don’t politicize Nazarene’s Trasclacion, Comelec tells poll bets House panel respects Marcos’ line veto of 2025 budget items – Co For German 'sick leave detective', business is booming DOH records 3 deaths due to noncommunicable diseases from Dec 22-30 Follow @FMangosingINQ on Twitter --> View comments
Last:wazamba Pangasinan farmer builds cacao ‘empire’ from backyard hobby
Next:wazamba Who’s Who in ‘A Complete Unknown’: A Guide to the Characters and Stars

Hot News

7game-7game casino-7game official site