Concorde crash enquiry begins in Paris

Comments Off

Posted on 3rd February 2010 by admin in Travel

Nearly ten years after the Air France Concorde crash that killed 113 people and terminated the life of  the supersonic plane, five men and Continental Airlines are to stand trial in Paris, accused of responsibility for the disaster.

The four-month trial in Cergy-Pontoise will try and establish why the Air France Concorde crashed whilst taking off from Charles de Gaulle airport on 25 July 2000.

French prosecutors will argue that an 18-inch scrap of titanium on the runway caused the accident. A Continental Airlines DC-10 shed the “wear strip” on the runway shortly before takeoff, shredding the Concorde’s tyre and splattering pieces of rubber into the fuel tanks, which caused a fire, they will say.

Continental Airways is accused of using titanium, despite it not being allowed for temporary repairs on aircraft.

Lawyers  will argue that a key part of the undercarriage had been accidentally left out by Air France ground staff, causing too much weight to bear on the tyres, one of which exploded when it hit a bump in the runway.

Air France and the French investigators admit that the Concorde’s undercarriage was not properly repaired, but yet they are adamant  that this would not have caused the tyre to burst, thus causing the crash and loss of life.

The trial will also examine whether the aircraft should have been grounded earlier, after weakness and design faults had previously come to light. 

In the 24 years of Concorde flights prior to the accident, there were 65 incidents of burst tyres, six of which led to the perforation of fuel tanks.

If convicted, Continental Airways faces a maximum fine of 375,000 euros (£328,000), and the five individual defendants face up to five years in jail and a fine of up to 75,000 euros (£66,000).

Concorde was decommissioned in 2003.

No comments yet.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.