Comment by jacquesm

Comment by jacquesm 4 days ago

357 replies | 2 pages

That is very exceptional. I've written fuel estimation software for airliners (cargo, fortunately), and the number of rules regarding go-arounds, alternates and holding time resulted in there usually being quite a bit of fuel in the tanks on landing, by design. I've never heard of '6 minutes left' in practice where it wasn't a massive issue and the investigation into how this could have happened will make for interesting reading. A couple of notes: the wind and the time spent on the three go-arounds + what was necessary to get to the alternate may not be the whole story here, that's actually factored in before you even take off.

I'd be very wary to get ahead of the investigation and make speculative statements on how this could have happened, the one thing that I know for sure is that it shouldn't have happened, no matter what.

PaulRobinson 3 days ago

The context you're missing is that Ryanair have routinely declared fuel emergencies in the past, and it seems an operational tactic - they want to carry less fuel to burn less fuel, and then have to regularly mayday to jump the stack on inbound, saving cash. That's not covered in the article, but you can sure as hell expect the CAA are going to take another look at them and their operations planning.

On this one, they did 3 attempted landings at Prestwick. [Edit: I now see that the third attempt was at EDI] What happened between the first and the second landing that made them think on their second go-around that a third attempt was more likely to succeed than the previous two? Was the wind dying down, or was the captain just feeling a bit braver or stupider? [Edit: I'm still curious as to what information they gathered that landing conditions were significantly different at EDI to make that diversion, given its relatively close and so likely to have similar weather].

Why was their final reserve Manchester when there were literally dozens of closer suitable airports, at least some of which are likely to have had better wind conditions by virtue of lower gusts, or more aligned to runway direction so not dealing with a strong crosswind?

There are many reasons I won't fly Ryanair, but not least because they have been shown over and over again to make reckless planning and operational decisions, and they are fortunate to have not had hull losses as a result. Time is ticking down, variance will catch them one day, and a sad & tragic catastrophe is only a matter of time. People will go to prison as a result, because this pattern of behaviour shows that this isn't "bad luck", it's calculated risk taking with passenger and crew lives to save money.

  • normie3000 3 days ago

    > There are many reasons I won't fly Ryanair

    I swore off them a decade ago when I realised how adversarial their relationship with their passengers is.

    Until an accident does happen, I have no doubt they'll trouser a lot of cash.

    • janc_ 3 days ago

      Not just adversarial to passengers but to their employees also.

      • normie3000 2 days ago

        I hadn't heard about this. They can't be having fun if that's the case, caught in between the treatment of their employer and the customers they pay it forward to (for money).

    • gizajob 3 days ago

      I fly with them all the time and never have any kind of issue at all. They offer a good deal, ok there’s a couple of obvious dark patterns in their app and way of doing business but they’re hardly unique in that respect. Feels like getting a fast bus between European cities nowadays.

      • anton001 3 days ago

        But these bus companies have also been involved in fatal accidents more than a few times over the past years.

        Multiple as a result of driver error or no outside involvement from a third party.

      • sjsdaiuasgdia 2 days ago

        Well that revolver didn't go off the last 5 times I pointed it at my head and pulled the trigger. Surely on the 6th pull we can guarantee the same outcome!

  • crmd 3 days ago

    I once had a board member who was also on the board of Ryan Air, and he casually told me a story about when their CEO gave a presentation on adding a credit card -powered interlock on the cabin lavatories. He told them, “They’re my planes and if you have the nerve to shit in them you should have to pay for the cleanup”.

    My colleague thought he was portraying the CEO as a cool guy and decisive manager, but I thought the guy sounds like a sociopath.

    • vrighter a day ago

      i heard from an airport employee once that they wanted to keep the airplane started in between flights. This was specifically so they can skip the preflight checks. Thankfully they were not allowed to

abtinf 4 days ago

Naively as an outsider, this situation seems like everything worked as intended?

On a nominally 2h45m flight, they spent an extra 2 hours in the air, presumably doing doing fuel intensive altitude changing maneuvers, and were eventually able to land safely with their reserves almost exhausted.

I’m a little confused by what there is to investigate at all.

How much fuel should they have landed with?

  • kqr 3 days ago

    In safety-critical systems, we distinguish between accidents (actual loss, e.g. lives, equipment, etc.) and hazardous states. The equation is

    hazardous state + environmental conditions = accident

    Since we can only control the system, and not its environment, we focus on preventing hazardous states, rather than accidents. If we can keep the system out of all hazardous states, we also avoid accidents. (Trying to prevent accidents while not paying attention to hazardous states amounts to relying on the environment always being on our side, and is bound to fail eventually.)

    One such hazardous state we have defined in aviation is "less than N minutes of fuel remaining when landing". If an aircraft lands with less than N minutes of fuel on board, it would only have taken bad environmental conditions to make it crash, rather than land. Thus we design commercial aviation so that planes always have N minutes of fuel remaining when landing. If they don't, that's a big deal: they've entered a hazardous state, and we never want to see that. (I don't remember if N is 30 or 45 or 60 but somewhere in that region.)

    For another example, one of my children loves playing around cliffs and rocks. Initially he was very keen on promising me that he wouldn't fall down. I explained the difference between accidents and hazardous states to him in childrens' terms, and he realised slowly that he cannot control whether or not he has an accident, so it's a bad idea to promise me that he won't have an accident. What he can control is whether or not bad environmental conditions lead to an accident, and he does that by keeping out of hazardous states. In this case, the hazardous state would be standing less than a child-height within a ledge when there is nobody below ready to catch. He can promise me to avoid that, and that satisfies me a lot more than a promise to not fall.

    • jacquesm 3 days ago

      If you haven't done so: please write a book. Aim it towards software professionals in non-regulated industries. I promise to buy 50 to give to all of my software developing colleagues.

      As for 'N', for turboprops it is 45, for jets it is 30.

      • kqr 3 days ago

        I want to write more about this, but it has been a really difficult subject to structure. I gave up halfway through this article, for example, and never published it – I didn't even get around to editing it, so it's mostly bad stream of consciousness stuff: https://entropicthoughts.com/root-cause-analysis-youre-doing...

        I intend to come back to it some day, but I do not think that day is today.

      • xeonmc 3 days ago

        If he aims it toward five year olds as he had explained it, bet it would be even more applicable to our profession.

      • DocTomoe 3 days ago

        Seconded.

        That being said: I have - for some years now - started to read air accident board reports (depending on your locale, they may be named slightly different). They make for a fascinating read, and they have made me approach debugging and postmortems in a more structured, more holistic way. They should be freely available on your transportation safety board websites (NTSB in America, BFU in Germany, ...)

      • ratorx 3 days ago

        Google’s SRE STPA starts with a similar model. I haven’t read the external document, but my team went through this process internally and we considered the hazardous states and environmental triggers.

        https://sre.google/stpa/teaching

        Disclaimer: currently employed by Google, this message is not sponsored.

      • edanm 3 days ago

        Seconded! This was an extremely well written and well thought out explanation of this idea. Would love to read more along these lines.

        (Will now be checking out your blog.)

    • AnthonyMouse 3 days ago

      > Trying to prevent accidents while not paying attention to hazardous states amounts to relying on the environment always being on our side, and is bound to fail eventually.

      The reason they had less than 30 minutes of fuel was because the environment wasn't on their side. They started out with a normal amount of reserve and then things went quite badly and the reserve was sufficient but only just.

      The question then is, how much of an outlier was this? Was this a perfect storm that only happens once in a century and the thing worse than this that would actually have exhausted the reserve only happens once in ten centuries? Or are planes doing this every Tuesday which would imply that something is very wrong?

      • kqr 3 days ago

        This is why staying out of hazardous conditions is a dynamic control problem, rather than a simple equation or plan you can set up ahead of time.

        There are multiple controllers interacting with the system (the FADEC computer in the engines, the flight management computer in the plane, pilots, ground crew, dispatchers, air traffic controllers, the people at EASA drafting regulations, etc.), trying to keep it outside of hazardous conditions. They do so by observing the state the system and the environment is in ("feedback"), running simulations of how it will evolve in the future ("mental models"), and making adjustments to the system ("control inputs") to keep it outside of hazardous conditions.

        Whenever the system enters a hazardous condition, there was something that made these controllers insufficient. Either someone had inadequate feedback, or inadequate mental models, or the control inputs were inoperational or insufficient. Or sometimes an entire controller that ought to have been there was missing!

        In this case it seems like the hazard could have been avoided any number of ways: ground the plane, add more fuel, divert sooner, be more conservative about weather on alternates, etc. Which control input is appropriate and how to ensure it is enacted in the future is up to the real investigators with access to all data necessary.

        -----

        You are correct that we will not ever be able to set up a system where all controllers are able to always keep it out of hazardous states perfectly. If that was a thing we would never have any accident ever – we would only have intentional losses that are calculated to be worth their revenue in additional efficiency.

        But by adopting the right framework for thinking about this ("how do active controllers dynamically keep the system out of hazards?") we can do a pretty good job of preventing most such problems. The good news is that predicting hazardous states is much easier than predicting accidents, so we can actually do a lot of this design up-front without first having an accident happen and then learning from it.

        • thaumasiotes 3 days ago

          > This is why staying out of hazardous conditions is a dynamic control problem

          I don't think this philosophy can work.

          If you can't control whether the environment will push you from a hazardous state into a failure state, you also can't control whether the environment will push you from a nonhazardous state into a hazardous state.

          If staying out of hazardous conditions is a dynamic control problem requiring on-the-fly adjustment from local actors, exactly the same thing is true of staying out of failure states.

          The point of defining hazardous states is that they are a buffer between you and failure. Sometimes you actually need the buffer. If you didn't, the hazardous state wouldn't be hazardous.

          But the only possible outcome of treating entering a hazardous state as equivalent to entering a failure state is that you start panicking whenever an airplane touches down with less than a hundred thousand gallons of fuel.

      • cyphar 3 days ago

        My understanding is that the SOP for low fuel is that you need to declare a fuel emergency (i.e., "Mayday Mayday Mayday Fuel") one you reach the point where you will land with only reserve fuel left. The point OP was making is that the entire system of fuel planning is designed so that you should never reach the Mayday stage as a result of something you can expect to happen eventually (such as really bad weather). If you land with reserve fuel, it is normally investigated like any other emergency.

        Flight plans require you to look at the weather reports of your destination before you take off and pick at least one or two alternates that will let you divert if the weather is marginal. The fuel you load includes several redundancies to deal with different unexpected conditions[1] as well as the need to divert if you cannot land.

        There have been a few historical cases of planes running out of fuel (and quite a few cases of planes landing with only reserve fuel), and usually the root cause was a pilot not making the decision to go to an alternate airport soon enough or not declaring an emergency immediately -- even with very dynamic weather conditions you should have enough fuel for a go-around, holding, and going to an alternate.

        [1]: https://www.casa.gov.au/guidelines-aircraft-fuel-requirement...

    • ndsipa_pomu 3 days ago

      That's very enlightening. I'm casually interested in traffic safety and road/junction designs from the perspective of a UK cyclist and there's a lot to be learnt from the safety culture/practices of the aviation industry. I typically think in terms of "safety margins" whilst cycling (e.g. if a driver pulls out of a side road in front of me, how quickly can I avoid them via swerving or brake to avoid a collision). I can imagine that hazardous states can be applied to a lot of the traffic behaviour at junctions.

    • jama211 3 days ago

      Well said, will think about asking this attitude towards my child, seems very helpful

  • gsnedders 4 days ago

    As others have said, final fuel reserves are typically at least half an hour, and you shouldn't really be cutting into them. What if their first approach into MAN had led to another go around?

    With a major storm heading north-easterly across the UK, the planning should have reasonably foreseen that an airport 56 miles east may also be unavailable, and should've further diverted prior to that point.

    They likely used the majority of their final fuel reserve on the secondary diversion from EDI to MAN, presumably having planned to land at their alternate (EDI) around the time they reached the final fuel reserve.

    Any CAA report into this, if there is one produced, is going to be interesting, because there's multiple people having made multiple decisions that led to this.

    • heelix 4 days ago

      Suspect they were IFR. All your points stand. First time flying things with a jet engine, I was shocked how much more fuel gets burned at low altitude. It almost always works out better to max climb to altitude and descend than to fly low and level. On a small jet, things can get spicy fast when ATC route you around at 5000' for 15 minutes or so. Three aborted landings would gobble gas like crazy.

      § 91.167 Fuel requirements for flight in IFR conditions.

      (a) No person may operate a civil aircraft in IFR conditions unless it carries enough fuel (considering weather reports and forecasts and weather conditions) to—

      (1) Complete the flight to the first airport of intended landing;

      (2) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, fly from that airport to the alternate airport; and

      (3) Fly after that for 45 minutes at normal cruising speed

      • raviolo 3 days ago

        They were most definitely IFR. Not because of the weather but because IFR is required above certain altitude 18,000 ft in the U.S. and typically lower in Europe (depends on a country). Jets including small private jets are almost always on IFR. Airliners with passengers - always.

      • mr_00ff00 3 days ago

        Why does it burn fuel so fast?

    • jacquesm 4 days ago

      Just reaching altitude again to make it to the first and later second alternate are mostly likely the biggest factors in the extra fuel consumption. That's very expensive.

      • cpncrunch 4 days ago

        The 30 min reserve is on top of the fuel needed to reach the alternate and do a landing there, so only the flight to the second alternate, plus the 2nd and 3rd landings at the initial destination would have cut into the reserve.

      • dTal 4 days ago

        You get that energy back on descent, no?

    • tstrimple 3 days ago

      > As others have said, final fuel reserves are typically at least half an hour, and you shouldn't really be cutting into them.

      This is one of the multiple layers of defense that airlines employ. In theory, no one single failure should cause a major incident because of redundancies and planning. Airlines rely on the "Swiss-cheese" model of safety. Each layer has its own risks and "holes" but by layering enough layers together there should be no clear path between all of the layers. In theory this prevents major incidents and given the commercial airline's safety records I'd say it works pretty fucking well. Landing with minutes of fuel left should be exceptional. But it also shouldn't be fatal or a major risk due to the other layers of the system. ATC will move heaven and earth to land a plane low on fuel or with engine trouble safely. And everyone else in the system having 30+ minutes of extra fuel gives the space for this sort of emergency sorting.

      I think this also reflects on the "efficiency" that MBA types bring to companies that they ruin. If an MBA sees a dozen landings with an extra hour of fuel, their mind starts churning at saving money. Surely an hour of extra fuel is too much and just wasted. Wasted because every extra gallon of fuel you take off with is extra weight you have to carry throughout the flight. Surely things would be more efficient if we could make sure planes only carry enough fuel to make their trip with very minimal overhead. And when everything goes perfectly according to plan, these decisions work out fine. Money is saved. Bonuses are paid. But the inevitable always happens. That's why it's called inevitable. Lives are lost. Wrists are slapped. Some people at the bottom lose their jobs. The world moves on.

    • MBCook 4 days ago

      I thought a lot of airlines had rules to limit the number of attempts you could make at a single airfield in an attempt to prevent this exact kind of situation.

      It sounds to me like they tried harder at their intended destination than maybe they should have, followed by going to an alternate airport that probably wasn’t a good choice in the first place, and then having to divert to the final airport where luckily they could land in time.

    • jstummbillig 3 days ago

      Interesting. To me it does not really make sense to think in terms of fuel left because, no matter the reserves, there can always be a situation so unlikely, so outside the ordinary, that it will drain all fuel reserves before you make it to the planned destination.

      I have no clue how else to think about it though.

      • lwhi 3 days ago

        So maybe the thing we can improve is an understanding of likelihood?

        I.e. prevent the journey from occurring if weather conditions are likely to be adverse above a certain threshold?

  • kube-system 4 days ago

    I'm not an aviation expert, but generally in safety engineering, safety buffers are not simply calculated as [normal situation] * [safety factor], but [worst case scenario] * [safety factor]

    If you ever cut into your safety allowance, you've already fucked up. Your expected design criteria should account for all use cases, nominal or worst-case. The safety factor is there for safety, it is never intended to be used.

    • abtinf 4 days ago

      This is really helpful and I think I understand now.

      The approach is basically “accounting for everything that might go wrong to the best of our experience, including problems arising from the complex interactions between the airplane and supporting ground systems and processes, this is how much fuel you need in the worst case scenario. And now lets add more to give us a cushion, and we will treat consumption of this last reserve as tantamount to a crash.”

    • jacquesm 4 days ago

      This is exactly how it is in this case. Any consumption of the fuel reserve would result in an investigation, this is a very extreme case and it may even result in a change in the rules depending on the root cause.

      • tonyhart7 4 days ago

        Yeah idk people debating about this, if this justifiable then its all gucci and world can learn from such experience

    • appreciatorBus 4 days ago

      Yes, exactly. The day it's normal to eat into the allowance is the day we start seeing planes falling out of sky for lack of fuel again. The only way to prevent that is to treat 30 min of fuel as seriously as you would 0 minutes.

    • lo0dot0 3 days ago

      Yes. Similarly, safety needs to be there even after the aging of materials over product lifetime. So basically when aging is the only variable to be considered end of life date is the worst case scenario.

  • loverofhumanz 4 days ago

    "I’m a little confused by what there is to investigate at all."

    You're confused why they should investigate how everyone on that flight came within minutes of dying?

    Something about the fuel reserves, procedures, or execution was clearly flawed.

    • TZubiri 3 days ago

      I think the argument is that this is precisely the tail end of exceptional conditions overfueling is designed for. If it's typical to fill fuel for 4 hours on a 2 hour flight, and the flight took 4 hours. It seems like this is exactly why they overfuel to 4 hours. If this happens once every 100k flights, then it doesn't even beg the question of "why aren't we overfuelling to 4.5 hours".

      This is just clarifying the question from the perspective of an outsider.

      That said, an investigation would be pretty reasonable, even if only to confirm that the abornamlity were forces majeures

      • jacquesm 3 days ago

        > If this happens once every 100k flights, then it doesn't even beg the question of "why aren't we overfuelling to 4.5 hours".

        - This does not happen once every 100k flights. That's once per day

        - If this were happening once every 100k flights we would be adding another half hour to the reserve tomorrow.

      • [removed] 3 days ago
        [deleted]
    • cosmicgadget 4 days ago

      Although credit is due to fuel reserve policies considering they landed after two diversions and three go arounds.

    • al_borland 4 days ago

      Or did it work as intended? The plane had multiple failed landing attempts, was re-routed, and had enough fuel to land safely. While no one wants to cut it this close, this was not a normal flight.

      I’m not an expert in this field, but it would seem that the weight of extra fuel would increase operating costs, so it’s is effectively insurance. How much extra fuel should be carried to account for unplanned events like this, while not carrying so much that it becomes cost prohibitive.

    • nickff 4 days ago

      Fuel depletion is risky, but not that risky; see the Gimli Glider for a case much more dangerous than this, which still worked out amazingly well.

      Edit: Here is the Wiki on incidents... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuel_starvation_and_fuel_exhau...

      • gmanley 4 days ago

        That example is so well known due to how exceptional it was, especially how the pilots handled it. Robert Pearson, the captain, was a very experienced glider pilot. That's something that not many commercial pilots have.

        There were also two factors in the landing, that allowed for this to happen. You're going to be coming in really fast for a landing, when gliding in a commercial jet, and you don't have access to your thrust reversers to slow it down. There was a repurposed runway, that they used to land, that just happened to have been used as a drag racing track and had a guard rail. They were able to slow down by scraping across that. It also just so happened the nose gear didn't deploy fully so scraping the nose of the plane against the ground also helped slow it down.

        Needless to say it was a bunch of very fortunate events that allowed it to not end in disaster. In any case I would consider it very risky.

      • jacquesm 4 days ago

        Fuel depletion is stupendously risky, it is one of the most risky things that can happen to a jet. The only things more dangerous are fire and control systems failure.

        The Gimli Glider was a case of many items of luck lining up.

      • troupo 4 days ago

        You could've read at least the Wikipedia page on how miraculous Gimli Glider was.

        From "all engine failure is never expected and not covered in training" to "Pearson was an experienced glider pilot familiar with techniques rarely needed in commercial flights" to the amount of maneuvers they had to execute on a barely responding aircraft

      • foofoo12 4 days ago

        I know you're trolling, but for anyone that hasn't heard of Gimli Glider, look it up or watch a documentary on youtube. The stars definitely aligned to make that happen.

      • loverofhumanz 4 days ago

        Depends largely on the altitude when fuel runs out. If it runs out when they're at 4,000 ft and it's windy, it's probably game over.

      • behringer 4 days ago

        And what happens if you're not at 40k feet when the fuel runs out?

  • appreciatorBus 4 days ago

    Depends if our goal is to have zero aircraft crashes. If the goal is zero, then for any given parameter, you have to define a margin of safety well before crash territory and treat breaching that margin as seriously as if there had been a crash.

    Similarly planes are kept 5 nautical miles apart horizontally, and if they get closer than that, you guessed it - investigation. Ofc planes could come within inches and everyone could live, but if we normalize flying within inches, the we are also normalizing zero safety margin, turning small minor inevitable human failings into catastrophe death & destruction. As an example, planes communicate with ATC over the radio and are given explicit instructions - turn left 20 degrees, fly heading 140 etc. From time to time these instructions are misunderstood and have to be corrected. At 5nm separation everyone involved has plenty of time to notice that something was missed/garbled/misinterpreted etc and correct. At 1 inch separation, there's no such time. Any mistake is fatal, even though in theory you are safe when separated by 1 inch.

    TBC an investigation doesn't mean investigating the pilots in order to assign blame, it means investigating the entire aviation system that led up to the breach. The pilot's actions / inaction will certainly be part of that, but the goal is to ask, "How could this have been avoided, and ask how every part of the system that we have some control or influence over might have contributed to the outcome"

    • henryfjordan 4 days ago

      We shouldn't aim for 0 crashes due to low fuel though. How many deaths does carrying around 3x fuel than what you reasonably need contribute to via extra pollution?

      We should aim for 1 every 10-100 years or something reasonable like that.

      • appreciatorBus 4 days ago

        We should account for deaths from pollution, but if we are going to do that, we should be willing to do that for 99% of aviation fuel that has nothing to do with reserves & safety margins, in addition to fuel used to drive cars.

        Any regulation short of "carry infinite fuel" will be a trade-off, and entail some risk and anyone involved in setting these knows that. Zero may not be our actual target or even possible, but it is a useful aspiration to ensure that everyone is pulling in the right direction.

      • hshdhdhehd 4 days ago

        We dont aim for 0. Zero means dont fly. one in every 100 years globally for all flights would be very safe.

        • vdqtp3 3 days ago

          On the contrary - commercial aviation does aim for perfection.

      • jacquesm 3 days ago

        At 3x the number of deaths would be 0 because there would be no more flights.

  • oxguy3 4 days ago

    Well imagine they had to do a go-around on that landing. Go-arounds are extremely normal and might be done for a million reasons; your speed is wrong, your descent rate is wrong, your positioning is wrong, there's bad wind, there's an issue on the ground, etc etc etc. Six minutes of fuel is really not enough to be sure that you can do a go-around. So now, if ANY of those very normal everyday issues occurs, the pilot has to choose between two very bad options: doing a go-around with almost no fuel, or attempting a landing despite the issue. That's just way too close for comfort.

    Aviation operates on a Swiss cheese model; the idea is that you want many many layers of safety (slices of cheese). Inevitably, every layer will have some holes, but with enough layers, you should still be safe; there won't be a hole that goes all the way through. In this case, they basically got down to their very last slice of cheese; it was just luck that the last layer held.

    • hugo1789 3 days ago

      I think he would attempting a landing despite the issue in most cases because running out of fuel during go-around would be worse.

  • constantcrying 4 days ago

    >I’m a little confused by what there is to investigate at all.

    One of the most important aspects of taking safety seriously is that you do not just investigate things which had an impact, but that you proactively investigate near misses (as was the case here) and even potential incidents.

    A plane with 6 minutes of fuel left is always a risk to every person on board and potentially others if an emergency landing becomes the only option.

    • MadnessASAP 4 days ago

      Indeed that is the definition of a "aviation incident" where there was a risk of injury or damage. If there is actual injury or damage it becomes an "accident".

      The investigations into incidents aren't usually particularly long or noteworthy and often the corrective action will be to brief X on dangers of Y, or some manner of bulletin distributed to operators.

  • sgjohnson 4 days ago

    If you cut into the final reserve, it’s a full-blown emergency requiring a mayday call.

    This should not happen. So what’s there to investigate? How it was allowed to happen, and how to prevent it from happening again.

    EDIT: it’s a mayday even earlier than that. It’s a mayday once the pilots know that they WILL land with less than the final reserve.

  • zerkten 4 days ago

    If they have to touch and go, how long would it take until they get the plane around for another approach? In fact, you might not get as far as that touch and go and have to go around. You need some margin for all of these eventualities. The likelihood is low that these happen, but they have to be accounted for.

    • bluGill 4 days ago

      Sure, but the flight was a lot longer than planed. How much extra do we need. They declared an emergency, and thus put themselves at the front of the line. They had 6 more minutes to do that touch and go around if that happened, and since they were already in a low fuel emergency they get priority and so there is enough time to do that if they needed. (edit - as others have noted, 6 minutes with high error bars, so they could have only had 30 seconds left which is not enough)

      They landed safely, that is what is important. There is great cost to have extra fuel on board, you need enough, but it doesn't look to me like more was needed. Unless an investigation determines that this emergency would happen often on that route - even then it seems like they should have been told to land in France or someplace long before they got to their intended destination to discover landing was impossible.

      • jacquesm 4 days ago

        > They had 6 more minutes to do that touch and go around if that happened

        6 minutes is way out of the comfort zone. They might not have made it in that case.

      • stahtops 4 days ago

        How much extra do you need? Enough that a pilot/crew doing their job properly will never run out of fuel and crash.

        So yes they will do an "investigation". It's not a criminal investigation. It's to understand the circumstances, the choices, the procedures, and the execution that ended with a plane dangerously close to running out of fuel.

        This will determine if there were mistakes made, or the reserve formula needs to be adjusted, or both.

        Don't tell me about cost, just stop. Let MAGA-Air accept some plane deaths to have cheap fares.

      • behringer 4 days ago

        With 6 minutes left everyone could have died if anything went wrong with the final landing, even a gust of wind could have ended everybody's life.

      • ktallett 4 days ago

        Surely the issue is more that they decided to make so many attempts to land local. There should be a max level of attempts.

  • rz2k 4 days ago

    This reminds of discussions following the Fukushima disaster where one commenter claimed that it wasn't a design flaw, because it was an extraordinary circumstance. I found this appalling, because I do not at all think that was the risk profile that was sold to the public; I think people believed that it was supposed to be designed to safely survive 1000-year earthquakes and the tsunamis that they create.

    Likewise, I think that the flying public is lead to believe fuel exhaustion is so rare that when airlines are compliant with regulations, no such disasters across all flights across all carriers will occur during your lifetime.

    • pornel 4 days ago

      It's also a communication problem, because labels like "100-year/1000-year event" are easily misunderstood.

      * they're derived from an estimated probability of the event (independently) happening each year. It doesn't mean that it won't happen for n years. The probability is the same every year.

      * the probabilities are estimates, trying to predict extreme outliers. Usually from less than 100s of years of data, using sparse records that may have never recorded a single outlier.

      * years = 1/annual_probability ends up giving large time spans for small probabilities. It means that uncertainty between 0.00001% and 0.00002% looks "off by 500 years".

      https://practical.engineering/blog/2025/9/16/an-engineers-pe...

      • kqr 3 days ago

        I find a useful exercise is to have a cheat sheet of historic flood heights in some area, tell someone the first record high, ask them how high they would make the levee and how long they think it would last. Peoples' sense for extremal events is bad.

        • jacquesm 3 days ago

          That's a great exercise. Where I live a lot of people died because in the past we were not able to make that guess correctly. A lot was learned, at great expense.

    • philipallstar 4 days ago

      I'm sure we can all remember at least one person in any situation who will say something we find memorably awful.

      • [removed] 4 days ago
        [deleted]
  • metalman 4 days ago

    6 min, is empty, 6 min is purely theoretical, 6 min would not clear for ground handling or a test start, or a fuel system check,6 min would not do a go around. will interesting to see if they release info about what the real amount of fuel left is, and an authorative discussion on how much useable flight time was there. did they actualy make the taxi to the terminal?, or run out on the apron?

    • scrumper 4 days ago

      I think the article says that someone saw 220kg written on a log - that's about 6 minutes worth at cruise. So yeah, it's zero basically.

    • jacquesm 4 days ago

      Yes. There is another comment above making light of the 6 minutes as if another go-around was still an option, that is a ridiculous take. They were going to bring that plane in and land it no matter what on this last run, otherwise they'd crash for sure. 6 minutes may not even be within the margin of readout.

    • jenadine 3 days ago

      By your logic you need an infinite amount of fuel.

      If you define X the amount of fuel you need after you land.

      And you say that X needs to be enough to make an emergency landing.

      And we define that the amount of fuel required for an emergency landing should cover the amount required for the landing operation while still having X in the tank when landed.

      X > X + landing_cost

      The plane already had made 3 failed attempt before and was redirected to two different airports.

  • goodcanadian 4 days ago

    Naively as an outsider, this situation seems like everything worked as intended?

    I don't remember all of the rules off the top of my head, but if you are ever landing with less than 30 minutes of fuel, something has gone seriously wrong. You are required to take off with sufficient fuel to fly to your destination, hold for a period of time, attempt a landing, fly to your alternate, and land all with 30 minutes remaining. If you are ever in a situation where you may not meet these conditions, you are required to divert immediately. In choosing your alternate, you consider weather conditions along with many other factors. This was, without question, a serious emergency.

    From the very brief description in the article, I would say they should have diverted to Manchester at least 25 minutes sooner than they did. I will include the GP's caution, however:

    I'd be very wary to get ahead of the investigation and make speculative statements on how this could have happened, the one thing that I know for sure is that it shouldn't have happened, no matter what.

    • hugh-avherald 3 days ago

      If you are ever in a situation where you estimate you will land with less than 30 minutes of fuel, you are legally obliged to declare a MAYDAY. One of the few situations where a mayday is legally required.

  • fabian2k 4 days ago

    My understanding is that they shouldn't have spent that much time in the air (not intended as a guess for the cause). The margin is there for situations where you can't land earlier, not the margin for scheduling the landing. There is margin for expected potential delays, they were in the other margin that should never be used except in true emergencies.

    • abtinf 4 days ago

      Oh I think I see; so is the question not “why did they land with so little fuel”, but more like “why did it take so long to decide to redirect to a known-safe airport”?

      • jacquesm 4 days ago

        Possibly. Or 'why did your fuel readings deviate from what was actually in the tanks' or 'why did we leave with less fuel than we thought we did' and so on. There are so many variables here speculation is completely pointless. All we know is that something went wrong, that it almost led to a crash and that it involves an airline with a very good record when it comes to things like this.

        Low fuel happens, but this is (very) exceptional.

      • fabian2k 4 days ago

        I don't know. As the parent said, I'd be careful with guessing the root cause right now. They should not have been this low even if diverted due to weather.

      • wahnfrieden 4 days ago

        By asking such a question you understand the need for an investigation

  • nucleardog 3 days ago

    Thirty minutes.

    If at any point you expect to touch down at the nearest safe airport with less than 30 minutes of fuel remaining, you are required by regulation to make a mayday call.

    Mayday is a term enshrined in law. It is only to be used when people will die if you do not receive help. In the US, calling it inappropriately can be punished with up to 10 years in jail and a $250k fine. It's protected in this way because as soon as you call mayday, in many situations there are actions that must be taken by law or regulation. Other appropriate uses include things like "our plane is on fire" or "our wing just fell off and we can't steer the plane".

    As soon as you think you can't land with the fuel reserves you are _required_ to call mayday, other pilots are _required_ to clear the radio for you, and ATC is _required_ to provide any and all supported possible until you're on the ground.

    The investigation is not to figure out who to send to jail or something. The investigation is because a flight just came this >< close to having hundreds of people die. That fuel is there as a safety margin, yes. That's how everyone ended up walking off this plane instead of dying as the plane was ripped apart by some trees somewhere. That is good.

    But air travel did not become as safe as it with an attitude of "this hasn't killed anyone yet, all good". The fact there was an incursion into the safety margin should not be looked at as "eh, working as intended" but "holy hell we just came this close to disaster, what went wrong that almost killed all these people? how do we stop that happening again?". That is what an investigation will be looking to figure out.

    To put it in vaguely IT terms, this is something like... your application has started corrupting its database, but you have _a_ backup copy. On one hand, you can think "eh, we have a backup, that's what it's there for, who cares". On the other you can go "holy shit, any time we need to restore from the backup we narrowly averted disaster... how do we make sure we're not in that situation again?". The former is probably going to lead to irrecoverable data loss eventually. The second will have you addressing problems _before_ they ruin you.

    • jacquesm 3 days ago

      What is fascinating about this whole discussion is that the general world of software development is so far away from actual engineering that all of these basics require painstaking explanation.

      • cozzyd 3 days ago

        5 9's uptime in aviation means one airliner crash a day.

    • jenadine 3 days ago

      > If at any point you expect to touch down at the nearest safe airport with less than 30 minutes of fuel remaining, you are required by regulation to make a mayday call.

      From the article, they did issue a mayday call, when the closest airport was presumably Edinburgh. Then they flew to Manchester and landed.

      • jacquesm 3 days ago

        There must have been a very good reason to do that.

  • nabla9 3 days ago

    >One pilot who reviewed the log said: “Just imagine that whenever you land with less than 2T (2,000kg) of fuel left you start paying close attention to the situation. Less than 1.5T you are sweating. But this is as close to a fatal accident as possible.”

  • Ekaros 4 days ago

    Only issue I see is that should there have been stricter rules to diverting way earlier. If winds were such as to make landing harder. Would just directly going somewhere else been the correct choice to force.

    • MBCook 4 days ago

      It also sounds like they went to an alternate airport they probably shouldn’t have bothered with.

      • rob74 4 days ago

        Well, if you know you're pretty low on fuel, you are likely to pick an airport where the weather is good, rather than risking three more missed approaches at a closer one where the weather is probably also bad.

        Of course, Manchester is also a Ryanair base. There are two Ryanair bases closer to Prestwick (Edinburgh and Newcastle), but maybe the weather was bad there too? If the fuel situation was so dire, questions might be asked during the investigation why they didn't pick a closer airport with good weather that wasn't a Ryanair base (if one existed), but ultimately it's the pilots' decision to fly a bit further to an airport they are familiar with, and second guessing them with the benefit of hindsight is probably not a good idea...

        • manarth 3 days ago

          They made two attempts to land at Prestwick, then diverted to Edinburgh (which also had bad weather). After one attempt at Edinburgh, they then diverted to Manchester.

    • jacquesm 4 days ago

      This is likely one of the questions the investigation will focus on.

  • lazide 4 days ago

    If you get shot, but had a bullet proof vest on, and hence didn’t die, technically everything worked as intended.

    Personally, I’d still want to figure out why I got shot and work on making sure that didn’t happen again.

    Especially if you basically got shot multiple times (for an analogy in this case).

  • jasonwatkinspdx 4 days ago

    > I’m a little confused by what there is to investigate at all.

    So because the safety margin still worked while down to near vapors we should conclude there's nothing to learn for the future to reduce the risk of similar incidents?

    That's certainly... a take.

  • gregoriol 4 days ago

    Flight from Edinburgh to Manchester is just a bit more than 1 hour, so after trying 2 landings, diverting to Edinburgh (15-20 minutes flight), 1 more landing attempt, well, you get very close to 2 hours.

    • gsnedders 4 days ago

      I felt like that seems a little long from EDI to MAN (after all, EDI to LHR is typically a flight time of under an hour!), so:

      https://globe.adsbexchange.com/?icao=4d2256&lat=54.720&lon=-... is the track of this flight.

      Went around at EDI at about 19:10Z, landed at about 19:51Z, so about a 41 minute flight.

      • gregoriol 4 days ago

        Right, I probably got the information for flight time as seen by a passenger on a ticket, not for a plane already flying. Thanks!

  • kokekolo 3 days ago

    Similarly naive outsider, but I've read things here and there. My understanding is that they should have declared mayday (emergency) and landed (potentially at another airport, potentially in the middle of nowhere) _way_ before so that when they have landed they still had 30 minutes or more of fuel in the tanks.

  • immibis 4 days ago

    Whether it can be prevented in the future. Should planes fly with even more reserve fuel? It's possible. Or maybe different ways of selecting alternate landing sites?

    It may even be the answer is "no, everything went as well as it possibly could have, and adding more reserve fuel to every flight would be unacceptably wasteful, so oh well", but at a minimum they'll probably recommend even more fuel on certain flights into risky weather.

  • wat10000 4 days ago

    Imagine you're standing on a balcony and discover that the supports are cracked almost all the way through.

    Do you shrug and say, that's why they have a safety factor, everything worked as intended? Or do you say, holy crap, I nearly died, how did this happen?

    The purpose of the safety factor is to save you if things go badly wrong. The fact that it did its job doesn't mean things didn't go badly wrong. If you don't address what happened then you no longer have a safety factor.

  • TheJoeMan 4 days ago

    I think a more insightful answer is how often is it acceptable for the reserves to actually be cut into. If this was happening often, then there’s a likelihood of a future disaster. As it is there is 1 isolated case that still ended with a positive outcome. I think it almost adds support for the current reserve levels to be pretty dialed-in.

    • jacquesm 4 days ago

      Officially: never. Unofficially, a minute or two would be cause for concern and the regulators would most likely be showing an interest. The airline may have a higher margin than the official one. This is exceptional, they were within the margin of error on readout and the pilots must have known that. It's one thing to know you have half an hour of fuel give-or-take in the tank it is another to know that give-or-take you are running on fumes.

    • baq 4 days ago

      The answer is 'never' as the reserves are only added for worse-than-worst case scenario, i.e. in this case something went literally unimaginably (as of then) wrong.

  • PunchyHamster 4 days ago

    Might not be about fuel but about why they even tried instead of diverting earlier.

    Might even be 100% done by the book but book needs changing (tho I doubt that, it's not exactly first case of "a lot of bad weather")

    • jacquesm 3 days ago

      Our definition of 'bad weather' is definitely changing as we gather more data.

      Besides regular weather (which airliners aim to avoid except during take off and landing) there are many other factors at play here. There are several almanacs that are used for fuel calculations & navigation, they are updated annually.

      The fastest jet stream (the aviation equivalent of the trade winds) recorded is north of 400 Kph, having that with you, against you or perpendicular to your flight path will have a substantial influence on fuel consumption and flight duration.

      I agree with you that it may well end up with a regulatory change but that's one of many possible outcomes here. I will definitely keep an eye out for the report on this flight's investigation. It is going to make for very educational reading.

  • ExoticPearTree 3 days ago

    > How much fuel should they have landed with?

    I think about 30 minutes worth of fuel.

    Not knowing their flight plan, it could have been that Edinburgh was the first alternate and Manchester the second alternate.

  • hshdhdhehd 4 days ago

    I dont know but maybe they should have diverted sooner. Maybe an hour into the flight?

  • rolph 4 days ago

    ideally, enough to divert to another airport, in the off chance something happens, like a pending emergency at point post.

  • paulddraper 4 days ago

    At what point should they investigate?

    0 minutes?

    -1 minutes?

    • jacquesm 4 days ago

      Anything less than 60 minutes would be looked at by the airline, anything less than the legally required amount (30 minutes for a jet of this type iirc) will result in a very serious investigation. Note that for slower aircraft (for instance a turbo-prop) the time requirement goes up not down because they may have to spend more time in the air to reach an alternate (or secondary alternate, if things are really bad, like what happened here).

    • jenadine 3 days ago

      They should investigate after the first failed landing, regardless of the amount of fuel in the tank.

      • jacquesm 3 days ago

        Go arounds are perfectly normal and are not a 'failed landing', a failed landing is a crash.

  • hinkley 4 days ago

    One of those YouTube channels where a professional pilot evaluates flying incidents had a similar incident when the pilot started yelling at the tower when they tried to make him go around again. He essentially said he would declare an emergency if he didn’t hear different instructions. I think he had 10-15 minutes when he touched down.

    One of the things the reserve is for is if the plane immediately in front of you fucks up the runway, you now have to divert to the next airport. You need at least enough fuel to get there and for the tower to shove everyone else out of the way so you can make an emergency landing.

    There are other reasons someone could abort a landing and have to go around again, besides debris in the runway. And sometimes two of them can happen consecutively.

    In the case I’m referencing, it was pointed out that p the pilot made things worse by going faster than he was told to fly, using up fuel and also making him too close to a previous plane which forced him to go around the previous time, so it wasn’t all the tower.

  • LightBug1 4 days ago

    Really? Equally as an outsider - it feels like one "go-around" and you're fucked.