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Delta Jet Dumped Fuel Over L.A. Without Warning, FAA Says

The Boeing 777-200 suffered an engine compressor stall after leaving Los Angeles International for Shanghai. 

Delta Jet Dumped Fuel Over L.A. Without Warning, FAA Says
A ground crew employee load supplies onto a Delta Air Lines Inc. plane at Salt Lake City International Airport (SLC) in Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S. (Photographer: George Frey/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The crew of a Delta Air Lines Inc. flight that experienced engine trouble shortly after taking off from Los Angeles failed to notify air traffic controllers before they dumped fuel over a densely populated area that included several elementary schools, the Federal Aviation Administration said.

While there is no regulation requiring such notice, it’s common practice so that flight controllers can direct the plane to an appropriate area to drop the fuel, the FAA said in an email Wednesday. The discharge from the Delta jet sickened 67 children and adults, although none was hospitalized.

“A review of yesterday’s air traffic control communications shows the Delta Flight 89 crew did not tell air traffic control that they needed to dump fuel,” said the U.S. regulator. “In this emergency situation, the fuel-dumping procedure did not occur at an optimal altitude that would have allowed the fuel to atomize properly.”

Fuel jettisoned higher than 5,000 to 6,000 feet will vaporize before hitting the ground, according to Boeing Co. The altitude of the Delta plane when it dropped the fuel hasn’t been disclosed.

Compressor Stall

The Boeing 777-200 suffered an engine compressor stall after leaving Los Angeles International for Shanghai, and the pilots notified air traffic control that the aircraft would need to return to the airport. The FAA continues to investigate the incident. Delta said it helped clean up the fuel at the schools, but declined to comment on the FAA statement or any aspect of the probe.

While it’s unclear how serious the emergency on the Delta flight was, pilots have discretion to ignore some FAA rules while faced with a dangerous situation. The crew members told controllers their situation was “not critical,” according to a recording posted by LiveATC.net.

Jetliners dump fuel in an emergency to lower their weight for landing. While the plane was capable of taking off, its weight with a full fuel load would have made it heavier than optimal for landing. Landing at higher weights causes stress on brakes and tires that can trigger fires or other issues.

The Delta plane, which was carrying 149 passengers and 15 crew members, landed safely. The fuel release “was required as part of normal procedure to reach a safe landing weight,” the airline said in a statement late Tuesday.

Delta said it “shares concerns regarding reports of minor injuries to adults and children at schools in the area.”

Engine Transport

A Russian cargo carrier, Volga-Dnepr Airlines, requested a regulatory exemption Wednesday to fly a replacement engine for Delta from Minneapolis to Los Angeles aboard its massive Antonov An-124 jet “to respond to an emergency created by unusual circumstances not arising in the normal course of business.”

In its application with the Department of Transportation, Volga-Dnepr added that “no U.S. carrier operates aircraft that are able to transport” the enormous Rolls-Royce Trent 800-series engine. If approved, the flight will occur Friday.

--With assistance from Justin Bachman.

To contact the reporters on this story: Mary Schlangenstein in Dallas at maryc.s@bloomberg.net;Alan Levin in Washington at alevin24@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Case at bcase4@bloomberg.net, Susan Warren

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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