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Laptop causes evacuation of American Airlines flight in San Francisco

Laptop causes evacuation of American Airlines flight in San Francisco
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Gary Leff Chief Financial Officer | View from the Wing

American Airlines flight 2045 from San Francisco to Miami was forced to evacuate due to a fire inside the aircraft cabin on Friday. The Airbus A321 was boarding for its trip to Miami at 12:15 p.m. when smoke reportedly filled the cabin, prompting crew members to evacuate the aircraft. Passengers exited via both emergency slides and the still-attached jetbridge.

The San Francisco Fire Department extinguished the fire, which was caused by a customer’s laptop. The aircraft had been slated to fly to Boston, Dallas, and Knoxville on Saturday. The deployment of what appears to be three slides makes that seem unlikely.

"Our American Airlines flight to Miami at SFO caught fire as we were boarding. Looked to the back of the plane and saw so much smoke and people screaming," tweeted Sirenita (@imdatgirlxo). "Something in the backpack below seems to be what had caught fire."

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"RIGHT NOW: An American Airlines flight was evacuated and three people were injured after a reported cabin fire at San Francisco International Airport on Friday," reported Suzanne Phan (@SuzannePhan).

"UPDATE: Three minor injuries were reported after an American Airlines plane at San Francisco International Airport was evacuated due to a fire in the cabin," stated NBC Bay Area (@nbcbayarea).

According to an American Airlines spokesperson, "During boarding of American Airlines flight 2045 with service from San Francisco (SFO) to Miami (MIA), smoke was reported from inside a customer’s bag. The bag was quickly removed by our crew members and all customers exited the aircraft. We thank our crew members for their professionalism and apologize to our customers for the inconvenience."

While lithium-ion batteries catching fire is uncommon, it can usually be contained in the passenger cabin but poses more difficulty as cargo. This risk is why airlines prohibit such batteries in checked luggage.

The aircraft would have had fire containment bags and heat-resistant gloves on board specifically for dealing with electronic device fires, typically stored in an aft galley cart. In-flight incidents involving such fires can be addressed using these tools.

In 2017, when laptops were banned from some U.S.-bound flights requiring them to be checked, it created significant risk since managing this type of fire is easier in the passenger cabin than in cargo.

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