Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Here are the letters that convinced Google and Apple to keep TikTok online

    July 3, 2025

    A Group of Young Cybercriminals Poses the ‘Most Imminent Threat’ of Cyberattacks Right Now

    July 3, 2025

    Apple’s colorful Watch Solo Loop bands are up to 70 percent off now

    July 3, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » Don’t Let the Boeing Headlines Fool You. Air Travel Is Really Very Safe
    Gear

    Don’t Let the Boeing Headlines Fool You. Air Travel Is Really Very Safe

    News RoomBy News RoomMarch 16, 20243 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email

    What the hell is going on up there in the sky?

    The incidents feel like they started in January, when a door plug blew out of a midair Boeing 737 MAX 9 aircraft operated by Alaska Airlines. Ensuing investigations have led to a series of revelations about a faltering safety culture at Boeing and its contractors. Then the creepy headlines kept coming. Just this month, a wheel fell off a United Airlines jetliner as it took off from San Francisco; flames shot out of an United flight’s engine as it left Houston, Texas; another United flight ran off the runway in Houston as it came in to land; and a Boeing 787 Dreamliner operated by the Chilean airline Latam and bound for Auckland, New Zealand, suddenly lost altitude while midair, injuring dozens of passengers.

    The incidents are unsettling. “The public has every right to be alarmed,” says Daniel Kwasi Adjekum, a former Ghana Air Force squadron commander who later flew Boeing 737 aircraft and now teaches aviation safety as a professor at the University of North Dakota.

    But data, stringently collected by the US Federal Aviation Administration and other global regulators, suggests that commercial flight is really very safe—and has even gotten safer over just the past two decades. “Statistics don’t show any significant abnormality,” Adjekum says. “Millions of flights are operated by airlines all over the world every day, and passengers get from A to B safely.”

    The incidents might just feel as if they’re coming fast because the media has been primed to report on the sort of scary but non-fatal screw-ups that happen when humans are operating any kind of system—and particularly those involving Boeing aircraft. But redundancy is always built into aviation systems, so that, say, losing one wheel doesn’t lead to a horrific crash.

    But that kind of public attention can actually be helpful to the aviation industry, Adjekum says: “When the media throws a spotlight, it forces all of us within the aviation industry to be extra cautious,” he says. “We go back to the drawing table, and we use the data collected to improve safety.”

    The US hasn’t seen a fatal commercial aircraft incident since 2018, when one passenger died onboard a Southwest Airlines flight after part of an engine broke off and shattered a cabin window. Before that, no one had died onboard a US flight since 2009.

    “Aviation in the US was the safest mode of transportation in 2023,” says Hassan Shahidi, the president and CEO of the Flight Safety Foundation, a nonprofit research and advocacy group.

    Experts attribute much of the US commercial aviation industry’s remarkable record of success to its approach to transparency. In the 1990s, the FAA began to reorient its safety programs around the idea that anyone in aviation—manufacturers, manufacturing line workers, air traffic controllers, pilots, crew members, maintenance people—should be able to report on their own mistakes without facing career-ending repercussions.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous Article20 Great Deals on Air Purifiers, Vacuums, and Bluetooth Speakers
    Next Article US prosecutors are investigating how Meta platforms played a part in illegal drug sales

    Related Posts

    What Is Apple One, and Should You Subscribe?

    July 3, 2025

    Top Hydrow Discount Codes for July

    July 3, 2025

    Wooting’s 80HE Feels Like the Pinnacle of Hall Effect Keyboards

    July 2, 2025

    These Transcribing Eyeglasses Put Subtitles on the World

    July 2, 2025

    AI Videos of Black Women Depicted as ‘Bigfoot’ Are Going Viral

    July 2, 2025

    Subscriber-Only Livestream Replay: Beginner Advice for Claude, a ChatGPT Alternative

    July 2, 2025
    Our Picks

    A Group of Young Cybercriminals Poses the ‘Most Imminent Threat’ of Cyberattacks Right Now

    July 3, 2025

    Apple’s colorful Watch Solo Loop bands are up to 70 percent off now

    July 3, 2025

    How to Protest Safely in the Age of Surveillance

    July 3, 2025

    E Ink is turning the laptop touchpad into an e-reader for AI apps

    July 3, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Security

    US Supreme Court Upholds Texas Porn ID Law

    By News RoomJuly 3, 2025

    If you try to access Pornhub, one of the world’s biggest websites, from any of…

    A European Startup’s Spacecraft Made It to Orbit. Now It’s Lost at Sea

    July 3, 2025

    ‘Persona 5: The Phantom X’ Brings the Series to Your Phone—and It’s Shockingly Good

    July 3, 2025

    Paramount Plus slashes prices to $2 for two months

    July 3, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.