TAM Crash Investigators Focus on Jet's Speed on Runway

By Alan Clendenning, Associated Press Writer

posted: 20 July 2007 09:56 am ET

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SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) -- Officials struggled Thursday to determine why a jetliner raced down a runway instead of slowing down before crashing in a fireball that killed 189 people -- an accident that set off a fierce debate over whether to shut down Brazil's busiest airport.

Security video released by the air force showed TAM Flight 3054 from Porto Alegre speeding down the tarmac more than four times as fast as other planes landing around the same time, raising the possibility of pilot or mechanical error instead of a slick and short runway blamed widely as a likely cause.

The Airbus A320 appeared to take off again after touching down and traveling down the runway and flew just above cars in rush hour traffic before slamming into a building Tuesday night, killing all 186 people aboard and at least three people on the ground.

It was Brazil's worst air disaster and the worst anywhere involving an Airbus A320, according to the aviation analysis Web site airsafe.com.

Brig. Jose Carlos Pereira, president of the national airport authority Infraero, said Thursday he was perplexed by the video and that an analysis of the black box soon may explain why the jet went so fast after touching down.

"Something went wrong during landing," he said. "For some reason, the plane did not slow down. Something happened and the pilot, for some reason, accelerated the plane."

Brazilian aviation consultant Elias Gedeon said it was too early to blame the pilot: "The bottom line is we don't know what happened. Why was he going so fast? He couldn't stop? Was it the water on the runway? Was it his ability? We don't know."

Congonhas recently resurfaced its runway to provide better braking in rainy conditions. But the new surface hadn't dried enough for the next step: cutting deep grooves into the tarmac that allow water to run off the runway and provide increased grip. Airplanes continued to slide off the runway after the resurfacing was done and before Tuesday's crash.

Federal prosecutors asked a federal judge to "temporarily paralyze" Congonhas Airport -- a move that could disrupt air travel across Latin America's largest nation - "until a complete renovation of both of its runways can be completed and there is certainty that they are fully secure for full operation."

While experts said such a move could cause air travel havoc throughout Brazil and severe financial repercussions for airlines, prosecutor Marcio Schusterschitz said he wants the airport closed because it's better "to choose life over money."

"We think this situation has reached its limit," Schusterschitz said in an interview with The Associated Press. "Unfortunately, the problems with the airport are not old, we are flying blind."

The judge could issue a decision as early as Monday as to whether to shutter the airport just four miles (six kilometers) from the center of Brazil's largest city.

Congonhas offers convenience for domestic passengers, despite concerns about its proximity to densely populated areas and the safety of short runways that end just before a major highway.

"This airport is too convenient not to be used," said Vivianne Santorini, a 57-year-old attorney waiting to check in for a flight to the central city of Belo Horizonte. "Is it safe? I guess not. But there are also risks driving you car and crossing the street and everybody continues driving their car and crossing the street."

Leonardo Mota Netto, chief spokesman for Infraero, said closing the airport was not realistic.

"To close down Congonhas, to do it correctly, would take at least 15 years," Mota said. "That is the time needed to build viable alternatives, new airports, and redirect flights to other airports in the region which will also have to undergo improvements in their infrastructure."

Mota said that about 18 million people pass through Congonhas each year. The airport, built in 1936 on what were then the city's outskirts, is designed to handle 12 million.

He said airlines and the public have resisted moves to limit flights at Congonhas and Brazil needs more airports, not fewer, with the number of air passengers growing at a rate of around 16 percent a year.

The alternatives, at least in the short run, appear to be few.

Sao Paulo's international airport in the suburb of Guarulhos lies 22 miles (36 kilometers) from the city center through dense traffic-clogged streets and doesn't have enough capacity to add all the flights that pass through Congonhas.

Aviation officials insist that Congonhas' 6,362-foot (1,939-meter) runway is safe, but pilots have complained about slippery conditions when wet and the small margin of error.

In 1996, a TAM Airlines Fokker-100 crashed into nearby houses shortly after takeoff, killing all 96 aboard and six on the ground.

On Thursday, another TAM plane had to pull out of a landing and was rerouted to the city's international airport after coming in at an unsafe angle -- a fairly routine event at Congonhas.

A day before the crash, two planes skidded off the runway. And on March 22, a Boeing 737-400 overshot it in a heavy rain, stopping just short of a steep drop.

In February, a federal court briefly banned three types of large jets from the runway, but was overruled on appeal. Airbus A320s were not covered under the court's ban.

By Thursday, 184 bodies had been retrieved from the site where the Airbus crashed, but forensic examiners had managed to identify only 11 and said it could take a month to identify them all.

The crash came less than a year after Brazil's previous worst air disaster: 154 people were killed in the September collision of a Gol Airlines Boeing 737 with a small jet over the Amazon rainforest.

That accident touched off months of congressional investigations that raised questions about the country's underfunded air traffic control system, deficient radar and lack of investment in infrastructure, even as airlines struggle to cope with a surge in air travel caused by Brazil's booming economy.

Finance Minister Guido Mantega said the government has invested heavily in Brazil's air travel infrastructure and plans future investments of US$526 million (euro382 million) to meet rising traffic.

The plane's two black boxes were being sent to the United States for analysis and French investigators also were helping probe the cause of the crash.

Henrique Castro de Souza, a civil servant in line for a TAM flight Thursday, said he believed the airport should close.

"Whenever lives are at risk and something can be done to reduce that risk, if that means shutting down this airport so be it," he said.

Associated Press Writers Michael Astor in Rio de Janeiro and Stan Lehman in Sao Paulo contributed to this report.

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