Two airliners were one minute from colliding when one of the planes turned away from the other over the Caribbean this week, federal authorities said Friday.
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said it was investigating an incident in which a
Delta Airlines flight and a
Russian-registered passenger jet were heading toward each other Thursday north of Puerto Rico when cockpit alarms went off. The
NTSB said the pilot of the
Russian plane — a Transaero Boeing 747 — descended 200 feet to 300 feet to avoid Delta Flight 485. The planes were at the same altitude — 33,000 feet over open ocean — and were “60 seconds apart from occupying the same airspace,” said NTSB spokesman Peter Knudson.Knudson said the agency doesn’t have enough information yet to know if the planes would have collided had evasive maneuvers not been taken, or if they would have narrowly missed each other.The two planes were about 180 miles north of
San Juan when the near-collision occurred at about 6:30 p.m. EDT. The Delta Boeing 737 — with 152 passengers aboard — was headed from
New York’s Kennedy International Airport to
Port of Spain, Trinidad.“This was every bit the classic near miss,” said Doug Church, a spokesman for the
National Air Traffic Controllers Association. Church said controllers in the Federal Aviation Administration’s air traffic control center in San Juan told him the airliners were on intersecting flight paths at the time of the incident.The
NTSB said there were no injuries.There was no
FAA radar coverage in the area where the planes nearly collided — as is the case over most open ocean. The NTSB says aircraft are required to remain at least 15 minutes apart when flying through areas with no radar coverage. Delta spokeswoman Betsy Talton declined to provide any further details of the incident. “We are fully cooperating with the NTSB,” said Betsy Talton.
Source: Kaieteur News (AP Joan Lowy)
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