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WSWS : News
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Contaminated aviation fuel grounds 5,000 planes in Australia
By Mike Head
25 January 2000
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No end is yet in sight to an aviation fuel contamination crisis
that has grounded an estimated 5,000 piston-engine planes across
eastern Australia and some in New Zealand since December 23. Most
of the affected light planes remain barred from flying indefinitely
despite an official announcement last Sunday that some planes
may be soon cleared for service.
Facing crippling losses and angered by weeks of official confusion,
bureaucratic delays and corporate buck-passing, aircraft owners
and small airlines this week launched two legal actions against
fuel refiner Mobil for losses in excess of $100 million.
Mobil says that a change in the production process at its Altona
(Melbourne) oil refinery from November 21 last year caused an
unexpected black-coloured contaminant. The company supplies about
one-third of the country's aviation gas, dominating supplies down
the busy east coast, with Shell and BP selling the rest.
Nearly half the country's 11,500 light planes have been unable
to fly for more than four weeks, paralysing rural transport services,
regional airports, emergency services, tourist operations and
agricultural activities such as crop-dusting. People in rural
and provincial areas, who depend heavily on air services, have
been worst hit, particularly over the peak holiday travel period.
In some cases, critical medical services have been inoperable,
with six Royal Flying Doctor service planes grounded, together
with air ambulances. Those immediately affected included 50 Victorian
country cancer patients who use air ambulances to fly to Melbourne
for chemotherapy.
In other instances, supplies of medications and other essential
items, including mail, have been disrupted. In Victoria, Country
Fire Authority fire spotting planes were grounded. Wider losses
are likely in agriculturefor some farmers this is the most
critical season for aerial crop spraying.
An estimated 7,000 jobs have been affected in small airlines,
flying schools, local airports and a host of other related operations.
Hundreds of aviation businesses face bankruptcy. Even airforce
Caribou transport aircraft have been halted, including one in
East Timor.
Many planes may never fly again because the black residueleft
in engines and fuel tanks by an excess of ethylene di-amine (EDA)can
permanently damage engine parts. Repairs and replacement engines
will cost up to $60,000 per aircraft. In some cases new aircraft
will be needed, costing $1 million or more each.
It appears that Mobil added the EDA, an anti-corrosion agent,
to counteract high acid levels. But when the additive came into
contact with brass or bronze engine components, such as fuel caps
and chains dangling in tanks, a black sludge-like material formed.
This sludge blocked fuel filters, carburettors and fuel-injection
systems, leading to rough running and engine failures.
The federal Air Traffic Safety Bureau says it cannot discount
the possibility that fuel contamination may have caused light
plane crashes over the past two years. Even since November 21,
four young people died in a Cessna 172 crash at Gisborne near
Melbourne and two helicopters crash-landed at Melbourne's light
aviation Moorabbin airport. A coroner is re-examining the engine
and fuel samples from the Cessna 172, which stalled in mid-air
and ploughed nose-first into the ground.
In the latest twist in the Avgas affair, the federal government's
Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) declared on Sunday that
a white gel found in fuel tanks was harmless. Yet the white substanceoriginally
thought to be a secondary contaminant produced by the EDAwas
the reason given for CASA's order of January 10 stopping all flights
by affected aircraft.
CASA claimed that its latest decision could allow 3,000 planes
to fly within a few days, provided they were tested first. But
even in checking aircraft, CASA is depending on Mobil to supply
the chemical kits that licensed aircraft engineers will use. Starved
of funds by successive governments, CASA lacks the financial resources
or skilled personnel to undertake the testing itself.
On Monday, the first day of testing, only five aircraft were
cleared to fly. The remaining aircraft, most of which are now
expected to fail the test, could be out of action for weeks more.
No reliable procedures have been devised to clean out the black
EDA residue. Moreover, CASA, Mobil and aircraft manufacturers
are at loggerheads over the impact of water-based cleansing processes,
with the manufacturers threatening to cancel their engine warranties.
Pilots and aircraft owners remain sceptical about CASA's assurances
that the white gel was harmless. Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association
(AOPA) general manager Mike Hart said: I think we are shocked
and appalled that after two weeks of considerable experimentation,
testing and soul searching the white substance turns out to be
supposedly harmless and there are concerns about the quality of
that advice.
From the outset both CASA and Mobil have sought to play down
the dangers and impact of the crisis. The fuel contamination only
came to light last December following reports of engine stoppages,
electric pump failures and sticky black deposits on engine parts.
In one incident, a light plane suffered engine failure on takeoff
from Moorabbin airport. It was not until December 23 that CASA
ordered all affected aircraft to undergo certified fuel tank cleansing.
Then on January 7, Mobil issued a letter to its customers warning
them that traces of contaminant had been found in previously cleaned
engines. We strongly recommend that you urge all customers
whose aircraft were fuelled in Victoria, NSW or southern Queensland
... to NOT fly their aircraft until further notice, the
letter said.
By contrast, Mobil's letter to CASA the same day suggested
only further cleaning. It urged CASA to give serious consideration
to issuing a requirement that all aircraft ... should have additional
fuel system cleaning before further operation. CASA did
not issue its Airworthiness Directive to ground the aircraft until
three days later.
Despite conceding that it is the source of the tainted fuel,
Mobil has failed to provide any explanation for the contamination
and has refused to accept legal liability. After weeks of stonewalling,
it unsuccessfully sought to evade legal action by announcing a
$15 million fund to pay for its customers' emergency repair work.
This gesture, with a limit of $10,000 per aircraft, was hailed
by Acting Prime Minister John Anderson. Mobil has recognised
that it has a moral obligation to assist the aviation industry
through this crisis, Anderson said.
Mobil's puny offer and its refusal to admit legal responsibility,
however, outraged many aircraft owners. AOPA president Bill Hamilton
said: The final damages bill is going to be far, far in
excess of the $15 million that is supposed to be for the worst
affected. We are talking about everything from the costs of cleaning
(engines), about the replacement of aircraft damaged beyond viable
repair, about planes that will be irreparable, about lost revenue
and businesses destroyed by this massive lapse in quality control.
In addition, aircraft operators accused CASA of ignoring indications
of tainted fuel two years ago. In early 1998 Schutt Aviation reported
problems with fuel pumps of Piper Chieftain aircraft. Then in
February and March 1999 the AOPA produced evidence of eight contamination
problems. Investigators are now also looking at a report from
Melbourne-based Direct Air Charter that pinpointed possible contamination
on November 8.
Without waiting for any investigation, CASA aviation safety
director Mick Toller declared that the 1998 problem was different.
He said he was confident that the current danger stemmed only
from Mobil's changed refining process last November 21.
The Howard government has refused to establish an independent
inquiry into the catastrophe, instead instructing its own Air
Traffic Safety Bureau, CASA's sister body, to conduct an investigation.
One key issue unlikely to be tackled is the effect of the previous
Labor government's 1991 decision to shift responsibility for monitoring
aviation fuel quality from regulators to the manufacturers.
The internal probe will exclude another underlying factorcost-cutting,
restructuring and rationalisation in the oil refining industry.
Mobil's recently-merged parent company, Exxon-Mobil, cut production
at its other Australian refinery, at Adelaide's Port Stanvac,
by almost a half last year and is rumoured to be planning to exit
the small Australian industry altogether. In recent years thousands
of jobs have been eliminated in the country's six refineries.
The Avgas disaster is the latest in a series of breakdowns
of essential services in Australia and neighbouring New Zealand.
An explosion at Mobil's Longford natural gas plant in 1998 cut
off gas supplies throughout the state of Victoria for more than
a month. Earlier that year, Sydney's water supply was seriously
affected for weeks by a bacterial contamination caused by sewage
runoff. Before that, prolonged electricity blackouts hit Brisbane
and Auckland.
Each breakdown was preceded by drastic job-shedding, maintenance
cutbacks, safety de-regulation and profit-driven restructuring.
And in every case, efforts to establish the causes and remedy
the damage suffered have been obstructed by official cover-ups
and expensive litigation in the courts.
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