![]() |
|
|
DOT 98-08
Contact: Brian Turmail, Tel.: (202) 366-4570
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
New Rule Reduces Risk of Fuel Tank Flammability on Passenger Jets
ASHBURN, Va.– Within two years, all new aircraft must include technology
designed to significantly reduce the risk of center fuel tank fires as part of a
final rule announced today by U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary E. Peters. In
addition, passenger aircraft built after 1991 must be retrofitted with
technology designed to keep center fuel tanks from catching fire, she said.
“We want to do everything possible to make sure safety examiners won’t have to
investigate another plane shattered by an exploding tank,” said Secretary
Peters. “We can’t change the past, but we can make the future safer for
thousands of air travelers, and this rule does just that.”
The Secretary, who spoke on the day before the anniversary of the crash of TWA
Flight 800, said the new rule was needed to help avoid a similar tragic
incident. She said the rule requires aircraft to have technology to neutralize
or eliminate flammable gasses from fuel tanks under the center wing of
commercial passenger planes.
Secretary Peters noted that in the wake of the TWA crash researchers with the
Federal Aviation Administration developed a breakthrough system that replaces
oxygen in the fuel tank with inert gas, which effectively prevents the potential
ignition of flammable vapors. She added that commercial aircraft manufacturer
Boeing also has developed a similar system.
“Today’s rule will add another layer of safety reducing the chance that the
vapors in the tank will ignite, even if there is a spark,” said FAA Acting
Administrator Robert A. Sturgell.
Secretary Peters noted the cost of installing the new technology would range
from $92,000 to $311,000 per aircraft, depending on its size. She said this cost
could be as little as one-tenth of one percent of the cost of a new aircraft.
The U.S. aircraft that will be retrofitted include approximately 2,730 aircraft
belonging to the A320 family of 900 airplanes, 50 A330s, 965 Boeing 737s, 60
Boeing 747s, 475 Boeing 757s, 150 Boeing 767s and 130 Boeing 777s.
“I recognize that this is a challenging time for commercial aviation,” Secretary
Peters said. “But there is no doubt that another crash like TWA 800 would pose a
far greater challenge.”
The Secretary made the announcement while addressing accident investigators at
the National Transportation Safety Board’s (NTSB) Training Facility in Virginia.
Before addressing the examiners, the Secretary, Acting Administrator Sturgell
and NTSB Chairman Mark Rosenker visited the remains of the TWA flight which are
kept at the site as an educational tool for safety investigators.
The rule is published on the FAA and Federal Register’s web sites at:
http://www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/rulemaking/recently_published/ or
http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html.
###