Economy
Related: About this forumForged documents for aircraft parts went undetected for years, report says
Forged documents for aircraft parts went undetected for years, report says
Report finds that dependence on paper, lack of information sharing hampered efforts to keep unapproved airplane parts out of the aviation ecosystem.
A TAP Air Portugal aircraft takes off from Dublin Airport in 2021. (Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters)
By Lori Aratani
October 9, 2024 at 5:59 p.m. EDT
In June 2023, a keen-eyed employee at TAP Air Portugal spotted a discrepancy: Parts for an airplane engine didnt seem to match the paperwork. The employee contacted the manufacturer, Safran, which quickly determined the documents had been falsified, setting off a worldwide scramble to identify and track thousands of suspect components. The investigation later determined that fewer than 1 percent of the Safran engines were affected, but the incident underscored the challenge of ferreting out fraud in an airliner manufacturing supply chain that is dependent on a sprawling global network of companies.
Details of the case over parts supplied by London-based AOG Technics were contained in a report published Wednesday by an industry group analyzing the broader problems revealed by the episode. The group, the Aviation Supply Chain Integrity Coalition, released recommendations to tighten up procedures to prevent unapproved parts from making their way onto commercial aircraft.
We want to make sure this never happens again, said John Porcari, former deputy secretary at the U.S. Transportation Department, who, along with Robert L. Sumwalt, former chair of the National Transportation Safety Board, co-chairs the coalition. This is about getting ahead of the curve.
The coalitions 48-page report found that despite efforts to modernize, the system for tracking and verifying the integrity of airplane parts remains heavily dependent on the expertise of individuals and on paper documents.
{snip}
Aaron Schaffer contributed to this report
By Lori Aratani
Lori Aratani writes about transportation issues, including how people get around -- or don't. Her beat includes airlines and airports, as well as the agencies that oversee them.follow on X @loriara
NJCher
(37,880 posts)I thought for sure this was about Boeing.
littlemissmartypants
(25,483 posts)Stargazer99
(2,936 posts)No wonder capitalist have no fear from not protecting the public and will continue this on any service or business because they know there will be no consequences
Bernardo de La Paz
(50,917 posts)It is not all or nothing. It is neither all have consequences or there are no consequences.
In reality, some do face consequences. Some face severe consequences.
"no consequences" is false. Period.
Stargazer99
(2,936 posts)to survive is evil because it kills or destroys people on the bottom of the power structure. Recently, two whistle blowers (Boeings) "committed suicide " while both stated if it was reported they died from suicide it would not be true. Greed is the companion to capitalism and until you stop the greed that destroys others it is an evil system and only the wealthy businesses win. I expect anyone who financially benefits from the capitalist system will do anything or say anything to defend it
Bernardo de La Paz
(50,917 posts)Stargazer99
(2,936 posts)It is just off Spain and it is successful even Microsoft sent their people to learn it. And if the US doesn't get private equity under control only the monies will be able to survive in the end result. And one thing for sure the employee owners would not be sending the business out of the US and hiding tax monies due
cloudbase
(5,747 posts)Really?
Bernardo de La Paz
(50,917 posts)Turbineguy
(38,378 posts)The office beancounters think they are saving money buying cheaper parts.