Human Error: Tenerife runway collision (1977): concurrence of errors…

n March 27th 1977, the biggest accident in airline history took place (at least if we leave the attack on the Twin Towers out of the equation).
The accident happened due to a concurrence of circumstances and an accumulation of human errors escalating to a disastrous 583 casualties.
A few of those circumstances and/or causes were:
* Stressors: fog and drizzle (limited sight of 1000 to 3000 feet), pilots were stressed out because both Boeing 747’s were (inconveniently) diverted to Tenerife instead of their original destination, Las Palmas. They couldn’t go there because of a bomb alarm, causing serious delays.
* Human error: due to the limited vision, the PanAm reaches the junction too late causing them to remain on the runway (too long).
* Technical problems: part of the lighting (center line) wasn’t ready yet and they were experiencing radio interference.
Authority: the KLM captain was (internationally) known for being ‘the exemplary pilot’ of KLM. He was a pilot and a flight instructor at the same time and KLM used him in advertising.
Read more here
Leave a Response
You must be logged in to post a comment.

