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ANA Wings Dash 8 avoids collision with airport vehicle during landing at Wakkanai

ANA Wings Dash 8 avoids collision with airport vehicle during landing at Wakkanai
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Mitsuko Tottori, CEO | Japan Airlines

Earlier this week, a near-miss incident occurred at Wakkanai Airport in Japan involving an ANA Wings Dash 8 turboprop and an airport vehicle. The aircraft, operating as All Nippon Airways flight NH4841 from New Chitose Airport to Wakkanai, was landing when it encountered a bird control vehicle on the runway. The vehicle was performing routine bird control work and managed to exit the runway before the plane touched down, preventing a collision.

The incident happened after the pilots changed their approach and runway choice due to stormy cumulonimbus clouds. This last-minute change was reportedly not communicated to local air traffic controllers, resulting in the aircraft landing on a runway that had just been vacated by the airport vehicle. Seventy-four people were onboard the turboprop at the time.

ANA issued a statement regarding the event: "We have received a report from the Japan Civil Aviation Bureau (JCAB) stating that a bird control vehicle was operating on the Wakkanai Airport runway when the aircraft entered its final approach. The aircraft may have landed while the vehicle was in the process of evacuating the runway."

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Investigators have been dispatched to examine how this situation developed and why communication failed between flight crew and ground staff. The event comes less than two years after another serious aviation accident in Japan.

On January 2, 2024, at Tokyo Haneda Airport, an Airbus A350-900 operating as Japan Airlines flight 516 collided with a Japan Coast Guard Dash 8 during landing. Both planes were destroyed by fire; all 379 passengers and crew on board the JAL plane survived with only minor injuries, but five of six occupants on board the Coast Guard aircraft died. An investigation found that the Coast Guard plane did not have clearance to be on the runway at that time.

While in this week's incident it was an aircraft rather than a ground vehicle or another plane that landed without proper coordination, similarities between these events highlight ongoing concerns about aviation safety protocols in Japan. Authorities are now investigating both incidents for possible systemic issues related to communication and procedures between pilots and airport operations teams.

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