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Geoffrey Arend Air CArgo News Thought Leader
Vol. 13 No. 55                                                                                                                             Tuesday June 24, 2014

AAIB assails Lithium Batteries

The British AAIB (Air Accidents Investigation Branch) has released their preliminary findings addressing the onboard fire incident relating to an Ethiopian Airlines B-787 parked on the LHR tarmac last year.
     The incident, classified “serious,” happened on July 12th at 15:34 h UTC to a Boeing 787-8 operated by Ethiopian Airlines while parked on the tarmac at London–Heathrow airport.
     The onboard fire, which started in the rear part of the cabin, consumed the crown of the fuselage, roughly located between the two rear doors on the left and right sides of the aircraft.
     Because the door areas are most exposed to stress and varying forces, the fuselage structure in that part of the aircraft is more robust than in other parts of the aircraft. The same goes for the pressure bulkhead, which seals the rear part of the aircraft and is imperative for maintaining cabin pressure.
     Since this incident happened soon after B-787 models were involved in incidents relating to their Lithium-Ion starter batteries, rumors spread immediately that this incident may have been Lithium battery related.
     Of course IATA, PRBA, and some other stakeholders slammed those rumors as “totally unfounded and without basis.”
     The latter, however, turned out to be premature.


AAIB Assails Runaway Lithium Batteries

     As AAIB Bulletin S4/2014 outlines in detail, a Lithium-Metal battery installed in a so-called ELT, an Emergency Location Transmitter started the Ethiopian fire.
     This device is intended to notify rescue authorities of the exact location of the aircraft in case of an emergency.
     The ELT in question, a Honeywell RESCU 406AFN, was located, as mentioned, in the aft fuselage crown above the passenger cabin.
     It may be noteworthy to explain that these devices typically operate in a non-powered silent (or “armed”) mode, not consuming any power unless activated in case of an emergency.
     The AAIB investigation showed that the internal battery back of the ELT had shown “severe disruption, exhibiting evidence of a very high-energy thermal event, consistent with having experienced a thermal runaway. All five cell cases had been breached and burnt battery material had been ejected into the battery compartment outside the ELT case.”


Causes

      The cause for the thermal runaway of this ELT Lithium-Metal battery was proven to be improper wiring, which likely took place upon installation of the ELT, when the aircraft was built in Boeing’s Seattle plant. For the record, there were no maintenance records relating to the ELT for the incident aircraft.
     While the exact accident scenario—for which the British AAIB has identified five likely sub scenarios—is under further investigation, all ELTs of the aforementioned type have been subjected to a mandatory safety inspection.
     It is also noteworthy that a review of the actions undertaken by the ELT manufacturer (Honeywell) and the assembler (Instrumar ELT) showed that a total of 26 ELT’s returned for inspection between July 2013 and February 2014 exhibited trapped wires.
     Based on the findings at the beginning of the investigation, the UK AAIB issued Safety Recommendations 2013-016 and 2013-017 recommending that the FAA as certifying authority for the B-787 aircraft model mandate inerting of the ELT types in question, and conduct a safety review of the ELT technology currently in use on other aircraft types.
     In response, the U.S. FAA issued Airworthiness Directive 2013-15-07 on July 26, 2013, requiring that within a 10-day timeframe the ELTs in question were either removed or inspected and corrective action taken. A subsequent service bulletin issued by Honeywell followed while the FAA undertook an extensive review of the ELT technology currently in use.
     Effective May 2014, the wiring of the Honeywell/Instrumar ELT’s has been changed so that further trapping of wires can be ruled out.


Lithium Metal Banned January 2015

      While a large part of the AAIB’s conclusive, although preliminary report deals with the aspects of aircraft equipment certification and the certification of Lithium batteries for use aboard aircraft, this investigation is far from over, and the AAIB subsequently issued Safety recommendation 2014-20 recommending that the FAA “develop enhanced certification requirements for the use of Lithium-Metal equipment in aviation.”
     The aforementioned measures undertaken by the UK AAIB, the US FAA, Honeywell/Instrumar, and Boeing will almost certainly prevent a similar incident or accident scenario from happening.
     However, at this point it must be explained that the battery type in question—Lithium-metal—will be banned from transportation as such starting January 1, 2015, according to decisions recently made by the ICAO DGB based on tests undertaken by the FAA and the volatile characteristics of the Lithium-metal battery technology.
     Emphasis is on “Lithium-metal batteries transported as such” (e.g. only the battery by itself) being banned from transport aboard passenger aircraft.
     Lithium-metal batteries either packed with equipment or installed in equipment will continue to be permitted for transport aboard passenger carrying aircraft from 2015 onwards.


Permitted But Prudent?


      Given the large scale of devices, gadgets, and toys incorporating or being shipped with such Lithium-metal batteries, and given the fact that such devices, toys, and gadgets are not subject to the stringent requirements of aircraft equipment, one must ask whether the permissibility of transporting Lithium-metal batteries aboard passenger-carrying aircraft is prudent.


Weighing Risks

      However, in all fairness it must be said that a ban of Lithium metal batteries packed with or installed in equipment would have serious implications on the global supply chain and would detrimentally affect everyone, from manufacturers to distributors and consumers alike.
     Given the rather complicated provisions and requirements pertaining to the shipping of Lithium batteries of any type, one obvious course of action would be to do away with the exemption from the formal dangerous goods training requirements for shippers of so-called “part II” or “excepted” batteries, since all stakeholders have identified training to be a key prerequisite to maintain a safe regimen for the shipping of dangerous goods by air.
     That being said, authorities will have to weigh carefully the risks associated with the transport of Lithium-metal batteries against the inconveniences within the supply chain.
Jens

 

Legendary Dubai Cargo Pioneer De Pauw Retires

   All of us have a vision of what life without air cargo might be.
Well, maybe not all of us.
   Richard Malkin, FlyingTypers’ Senior Contributing Editor, who turns 101 this week, once told me: “[I’m] glad I came out of retirement at 100 to write air cargo history to share with future generations.”    He is currently readying a return to conducting interviews with industry leaders..
   “Actually,” Richard said, “I think writing is lengthening my life.”
   I kissed him when he said that.
   Unfortunately, retirement plans abound elsewhere (albeit outside of our circle).
   Our friend Jean Pierre (JD) De Pauw is a well-known and much-respected genius of the air cargo handling form, and for the past two and a half decades has been “Mr. Air Cargo,” serving as Divisional Senior Vice President at dnata Cargo Dubai.
   JD has shepherded dnata Cargo from a “hump and run” air cargo handler to a big league visionary operation; in 2014 dnata Cargo represents the “standard of the world” and is still growing.
   Along the way, what is new and different has migrated from almost everywhere else on earth to the busy global hub of Dubai.
   One tends to worry when a hard driving guy like JD puts down the sword and says he is going home.
   But JD has a plan, a place, and a persona: as an hotelier, opening a small bed & breakfast in the Philippines.
   Here, he explains:
   “It’s my turn to take my leave from bustling Dubai.
   “A leave I have been planning for many years, and have been looking forward to.
   “I have handed over the reign of the dnata Cargo division and on June 27, with my family, we depart Dubai to take up residence in our home in Philippines.
   “It was a great pleasure and privilege to have known all the great people and spend many hours together discussing the industry, which is so dear to all of us…
   “I am moving into a totally new direction (no consultancy role for me), away from air cargo—something more manageable, less political, and far less complicated, a small boutique hotel on a hill at the beach, overlooking the sea… my retirement is a new challenge, one I can work on together with my family.
   “I have loved sharing with the industry my life in Dubai for the past 23 years, working with a special group through good and—no hiding— sometimes challenging moments and difficult times.
   “I wish Air Cargo News and FlyingTypers continued success.
   “You are the best!
   “So as we close the book on my 44-year career, from a humble beginning at Pan Am Cargo Brussels to mighty dnata Cargo Dubai, farewell and happy landings to all…”
   So to JD and family, bon voyage, all good luck, a bit of a tweet tweet, and keep in touch.
         There’s a small hotel
         With a wishing well,
         I wish that we were there, together!

Geoffrey

(“There’s a Small Hotel” by Lorenz Hart/Richard Rodgers)


Chuckles for June 24, 2014

 

Editor's Note: The major takeaway from all of the cargo events centers on what we heard from the always astute and varied group of remarkable executives, who either attended only some of the them or, like us, were present for them all.
     In 2014 there are two schools of thought about air cargo events:
     One thought is that there are simply too many air cargo trade shows; the other is that too much is never enough.
     We fall somewhere in between those two sentiments.
     For us at least, there is always an interview or speech that changes everything and makes us glad we heard it.

In The Event TIACA Blossoms

Oliver Evans QuoteI couldn’t agree more: there are too many events, and perhaps too little quality. The funny thing about our industry is that it reminds me of sport: have you ever wondered why teams (or individuals) have winning streaks, followed by losing streaks? Don’t the latter always follow a sudden – or not so sudden – loss of confidence?
     There is plenty of evidence of loss of confidence in the industry today: freighters parked in the desert, heads of cargo rolling, cargo being integrated back into passenger hierarchies, and, yes, the perennial – and totally absurd – retreat from contractual relationships (aimed at win-win) to transactional, adhoc pricing (from shipper to forwarder and from forwarder to airline) which commoditizes and trivializes all the wonderful efforts we make to provide quality and reliability.
     That is the downward spiral, leading to losses, which in turn make CEOs and entire organizations look inward and forget the customer, let alone new opportunities.


Time To Look Up & Out

      I say there is no better time and no more urgent task than to look outward, to learn from our environment (competitors, suppliers, customers, regulators, observers, entrepreneurs, creators).
     It is never somebody else’s job, it is up to us, the industry leaders to make a difference, to stop that downward spiral, to make us a driver of change and not a victim of change.


TIACA October Fest In Seoul

     TIACA has a unique role to play in this, being the association that brings together all the various stakeholder groups of the industry: not to take away from the valiant efforts and achievements of IATA, FIATA, etc, but to build upon them and help to knit them together.
     The TIACA Air Cargo Forum, held every 2 years in major cargo hubs, is just around the corner.
     We have a great array of speakers for the plenary sessions, with the top officials of ICAO, WCO, UPU. We are expecting lively debate in the workshops, as we had in Istanbul at the Executive Summit.
     And we are building on the excellent initiative of IATA in conducting follow-up sessions of the Cargo Executive Summit and the Future Air Cargo Executive Summit (FACES).
     It promises to be a great event.
     Be there.

Oliver Evans
TIACA Chairman


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Alaska Begins Big Easy

   Alaska Airlines began a daily round-trip service between Seattle and New Orleans Wednesday as the only carrier offering nonstop service between Seattle and “The Big Easy.”
   To celebrate the launch, airport executives pulled out all the stops welcoming first flights, and garlanding passengers with strands of the traditional Mardi Gras beads.

Alaska Passengers Arriving At New Orleans

     “We are extremely pleased to welcome Alaska and look forward to sharing our great Louisiana hospitality and air cargo opportunities with a growing audience of our new friends from the great northwest,” said Gary Roulston, Marketing Manager, Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport.

Richard Malkin
Click Here To Read Intro
Click Here To Read Part I
Click Here To Read Part II
Click Here To Read Part III



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