US sees no immediate reason to ground Boeing 787 flights
13/6/2025 6:26
U.S. officials said on Thursday they have not seen any
immediate safety data that would require halting Boeing
787 flights after a fatal Air India accident killed over 240
people.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and Acting Federal
Aviation Administration head Chris Rocheleau made the comments
at a news conference and said they had seen videos of the crash
in India.
Duffy said he had spoken to National Transportation
Safety Board Chair Jennifer Homendy. An NTSB and FAA team, with
support from Boeing and engine manufacturer GE Aerospace,
was going to India, Duffy said.
"They have to get on the ground and take a look. But
again right now it'd be way too premature," Duffy said. "People
are looking at videos and trying to assess what happened, which
is never a strong, smart way to make decisions on what took
place."
Duffy said the FAA was reviewing information with Boeing
and GE as part of the investigation into the crash.
Duffy also emphasized the U.S. government "will not hesitate
to implement any safety recommendations that may arise. We will
follow the facts and put safety first."
Rocheleau said, "As we proceed down this road with the
investigation itself, if there's any information that becomes
available to us regarding any risk, we will mitigate those
risks."
Duffy said the FAA is "prepared to send additional resources
to get the data we need to ensure the safety of the flying
public."
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