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Tue, May 14, 2013

Consumer Groups Want Limits On Dreamliner Flights

Flyersrights.org, Aviation Consumer Action Project Say Battery Safety Not Yet Proven

Two air- passenger advocacy groups are demanding the U.S. government limit flights on Boeing's Dreamliner until the safety of its lithium-ion batteries is proven. FlyersRights.org and the Aviation Consumer Action Project are petitioning the FAA and the Department of Transportation (DOT) for a two hour limit from the nearest airport for the safety of passengers and crew.

"Our proposed actions are both urgent and necessary," said attorney Paul Hudson, leader of both organizations and a self-proclaimed aviation-safety advocate for 25 years. "The 787 lithium ion batteries have a long history of overheating, catching fire, even exploding. This could easily bring down an airliner, especially if it was not within easy reach of an airport for an emergency landing," Hudson said. "Such batteries have been labeled as hazardous by the FAA and banned from being carried as cargo on most passenger jets. In one year of operations of 52,000 hours there have been several 787 battery failures versus one for every 10 million hours of predicted by Boeing. Adequate testing of the batteries haven't  been done and the fire investigation is not finished,"  he added.

With over 25,000 members nationwide, FlyersRights.org is the nation's largest non-profit airline passenger organization, which pushed for and won a federal rule limiting tarmac flight delays to 3 hours. The Aviation Consumer Action Project has advocated for air safety, security and consumer rights for over 40 years.

The advocacy groups' formal petition is backed up by testimony from a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor, a prominent battery-safety consultant and former DOT Inspector General Mary Schiavo. Limiting the 787 to flights within two hours of the nearest airport would ban 787 trans-Pacific flights, flights over the North Pole. Flights between the U.S. and Europe over the north Atlantic and flights over land would not be affected by a two-hour limit.

Although U.S. investigators still don't know what caused the batteries to overheat, the FAA has approved a proposed Boeing fix that the manufacturer claims would stop any fires that started. United Airlines, the only U.S. carrier with 787s in its fleet, is scheduled to resume 787 flights on May 20. Some foreign airlines have already resumed Dreamliner flights, and others will begin flying them again soon.

On January 18 th, DOT Secretary Ray LaHood emphatically stated, "Those planes won't fly until we're 1,000% sure they are safe to fly."  

"Four months is a very short time to be '1,000 percent' sure about anything -- much less a highly complex lithium-ion battery that's known to be prone to fire on board an aircraft carrying over 200 passengers and crew. It would be a shame for Secretary LaHood to culminate his many years of service with a reckless and hasty decision like this," says Hudson.

(Images from file)

FMI; www.FlyersRights.org

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