Sunday, April 18, 2010

Volcanic No-Fly Zone

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I don't really understand why virtually all of Europe has been declared a No-Fly Zone due to a rather normal eruption of the Eyjafjallajökull volcano in Iceland.  Similar eruptions have occurred many times in the past, with no problems being reported.
 

When jet aircraft fly into a dense cloud of volcanic ash, the engines can sustain damage, flame out, potentially causing a crash. Less dense clouds can cause windshield pitting, paint damage, melted rock deposition, and engine compressor blade erosion.

Only twice in the history of aviation have commercial jet engines failed due to ash. Once was in 1982, when a British Airlines 747 (tag G-BDXH) bound for Jakarta Indonesia lost all engines while flying through a thick plume from Mount Galunggung.  The other occurrence was in 1989 when a KLM 747 (tag PH-BFC), on its way from Amsterdam to Tokyo, lost all four engines flying through an ash cloud from Mount Redoubt while descending into Anchorage Alaska.


In both occurrences, engines were restarted and the aircraft landed successfully.

KLM PH-BFC in recent years 

G-BDXH in 2003 after being sold to a charter outfit


The disruption in European air travel is greater than that seen following the 11 September 2001 attacks when flights were only shut down for three days in Europe.  Estimated losses by the airlines are $200M per day, plus of course the untold millions lost because business travelers are stranded and can't do business (although I saw that the President of Iceland was running his country via an iPad).


The airlines want to fly.  They have stated to regulators that it is safe to fly, and they have performed test flights over the last few days to prove it.  But the governments won't allow it.

It all seems rather silly.  Reasonably good-sized eruptions occur in Iceland every 2-3 years, with large ones every 5-10 years.  In the past, aircraft have been routed around the denser clouds.  For example, in 2004, Grímsvötn erupted and caused ashfall in Europe. No closures resulted.

When Mount St. Helens exploded in 1980, I saw significant ashfall in Colorado, more than 1000 miles away. (A layer of fine dust was visible on cars and other surfaces, with some particles up to a millimeter in size.)  It was a huge eruption, much larger than the current one in Iceland. Airspace closures only affected the areas right around the eruption -- and I know personally that research aircraft continued to fly directly into the plume (but not without some damage).

If this goes on much longer, airlines will start defaulting on debt and may require government bailouts or nationalization.

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2 comments:

  1. HEARING BEFORE THE
    SUBCOMMITTEE ON DISASTER PREVENTION ANDPREDICTION
    OF THE COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE, SCIENCE, AND TRANSPORTATION
    UNITED STATES SENATE

    MARCH 16, 2006

    From 1980 to 2005, more than 100 turbojet aircraft have sustained volcanic
    ash damage, with repair costs in excess of $250 million dollars.
    Seven of these encounters caused temporary engine failure, and 3
    of the aircraft involved temporarily lost all engine power. These engine
    failures took place as far away as 600 miles from the erupting
    volcano and more than 1,500 passengers were in jeopardy.
    Volcanoes around the Pacific form what’s referred to as

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  2. Certainly there is a concern, but $250 million in damages over 25 years is really nothing compared to the $200 million per day losses currently being incurred. Seven engine failure events over 25 years and roughly a billion flights seems almost ignorable compared to other risks of flying. It makes sense to measure cloud densities and extent using reports from aircraft and perhaps weather balloons, and then use that data to predict areas to route around.

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