Cathay Pacific Inspects Airbus A350 Jets After Engine Component Failure
Cathay Pacific Airways began inspecting all Airbus A350 jets following an engine component failure during a flight. The incident caused a sharp decline in Rolls-Royce shares. Investigations are ongoing, and numerous flights have been canceled. EASA is monitoring the situation but has not yet mandated fleet-level actions.
Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific Airways announced on Monday the commencement of inspections for all its Airbus A350 jets. This comes after an engine component failure occurred mid-flight, significantly impacting shares in the British engine supplier Rolls-Royce.
In light of the issue, Cathay Pacific has canceled 24 return flights scheduled until Tuesday's end. It emphasized that the inspections were a precautionary measure, stating that some aircraft will be out of service for several days. An Airbus spokesperson deferred inquiries to the airline and Rolls-Royce.
The problem emerged minutes post-takeoff as flight CX383 veered off its intended course. Cathay Pacific specified that this was the first such failure for the A350 globally. A subsequent investigation, reportedly involving a fuel nozzle issue, has been launched by Hong Kong's Air Accident Investigation Authority.
(With inputs from agencies.)