By Stanley Widianto and Jamie Freed
JAKARTA (Reuters) – Indonesian investigators may need another year to determine the cause of last year’s crash of a Sriwijaya Air jet that killed all 62 people on board, according to an interim report released on Thursday.
Under international standards, a final report would normally be issued within a year of the Jan. 9, 2021 crash, but Indonesia’s National Transportation Safety Committee (KNKT) said the pandemic had made it harder for its team to travel.
“Because data has just been gathered, we’re compiling a final report, including an analysis and a conclusion,” KNKT investigator Nurcahyo Utomo told Reuters.
The Sriwijaya accident was Indonesia’s third major airline crash in just over six years and shone a spotlight on the country’s poor air safety record.
The 26-year-old Boeing Co 737-500 had an imbalance in engine thrust that eventually led the plane into a sharp roll and then a final dive into the sea, the interim report said.
That was in line with a preliminary report issued last year.
When the plane reached 8,150 feet (2,484 metres) after take-off from Jakarta, the left engine throttle lever moved back while the right lever stayed in its original position, the reports said, citing the flight data recorder.
There had been two prior problems reported with the autothrottle system that automatically controls engine power based on maintenance logs, but the issue was rectified four days before the crash, KNKT said last year.
The cockpit voice recorder was recovered from the Java Sea in March, after the preliminary report was released.
The interim report said the first officer’s communications had been recorded but the captain’s voice was only recorded when loud enough to be heard from the first officer’s headset microphone. It did not provide details of the communications.
The investigation also ran tests on the ground proximity warning system and spoiler angles as well as flight control and autothrottle computers that were previously installed but removed before the accident. Two flight simulations were conducted in the United States, the report added.
(Reporting by Stanley Widianto in Jakarta and Jamie Freed in Sydney; Editing by Mark Potter)