Australia leads new plane tracking program

Australia leads new plane tracking program

Australia, Indonesia and Malaysia are setting the benchmark in aircraft tracking, just a week out from the anniversary of MH370’s disappearance.

According to a report from Skift, the three search nations will trial an enhanced method of tracking aircraft over remote oceans, ensuring planes will be found more efficiently should they vanish.

Australia’s transport minister Warren Truss said government-owned agency Airservices Australia will work with both Malaysia and Indonesia to test the new method, which would track plane coordinates every 15 minutes, as opposed to the standard rate of every 30-40 minutes.

The tracking would bump up to five minutes or less if there is a deviation in the plane’s movements, according to Skift.

The trial is expected to use satellite-based positioning technology that is already installed on 90% of long-haul aircraft, which shares the plane’s current position, as well as the two impending positions on its course, Airservices Australia’s chairman Angus Houston said.

Houston spoke to reporters in Canberra recently, saying that while the technology is no silver bullet, it’s still a necessary progression.

“It is an important step in delivering immediate improvements to the way we currently track aircraft while more comprehensive solutions are developed,” he said.

According to Skift, Houston also warned that the new method being trialled would not necessarily have made a difference to the tracking of Flight 370, whose tracking equipment shut down during its flight.

The flight 370 vanished from its course on March 8 2014, and despite an extensive, months-long search across a 60,000-square-kilometer patch of the Indian Ocean, nothing has been found.

And while there is no requirement for real-time tracking of commercial aircraft, since the mysterious disappearance of MH370, more and more aviation experts have called for new technology to better track planes in the hopes of avoiding a recurrence of this event.

Skift also quoted Houston as warning that while the system can help track planes more accurately, it can still be turned off onboard.

“If somebody had turned the system off, we’re in the same set of circumstances as we’ve experienced on the latter part of the flight of MH370,” he said.

Image source: Global Voices Online

Latest News

  • Products

Embrace the journey: Traversing the world with the Shokz OpenRun

If you’ve been on the wrong side of a final call in the airport, or missed the stop on rail journey, it might be time to invest in a pair of Shokz OpenRun headphones. Originally marketed as headphones for fitness fanatics, runners or cyclists with a keen to steer clear of a prang with a car, […]

  • Tour Operators
  • Tourism

TTC: Deals are driving up demand for September trips

The latest market research from TTC Tour Brands shows interest in international leisure travel remains high for 2024, with 77 per cent of Australians over 18 still planning trips this year. Notably, 28 per cent of those travellers are eyeing September for their journeys. Europe continues to be the most popular destination, with 68 per […]

  • Aviation

Qantas ‘working urgently’ to fix app data leak

Qantas is looking into customer reports that passengers have this morning been able to access other passengers’ personal information on the airlines app. X user Lachlan posted that he was able log into different accounts every time he opened the app. My @Qantas app logs me in to a different person each time I open […]

  • Hotels

Revamped Wailoaloa Beach hotel opens as Crowne Plaza Fiji Nadi Bay Resort & Spa

Crowne Plaza Fiji Nadi Bay Resort & Spa is open and ready for bookings after the first phase of a multi-million-dollar transformation. Part of IHG Hotels & Resorts’ premium collection, the transformation has seen the completion of 106 guestrooms showcasing contemporary interiors reflective of the premium Crowne Plaza brand and is a first for the […]

  • Luxury
  • News

Kamalaya Koh Samui clinches clutch of wellness awards

Kamalaya Wellness Sanctuary & Holistic Spa has so far clinched five prestigious awards in 2024, including being inducted into the ‘Hall of Fame’ at the World Spa & Wellness Awards in London. Founders of the Koh Samui sanctuary and spa John and Karina Stewart expressed their heartfelt gratitude for the awards. “We are profoundly honoured […]