First Dreamliner returns to skies

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First Dreamliner returns to skies

Ethiopian Airlines has become the first airline to resume commercial flights with the Boeing 787 Dreamliner following the aircraft's grounding.

Ethiopian Airlines has become the first airline to resume commercial flights with the Boeing 787 Dreamliner following the aircraft's grounding.Credit: AFP

An Ethiopian Airlines Dreamliner jet has taken off on a commercial flight, becoming the first carrier to resume flying the Boeing 787 aircraft that were grounded worldwide three months ago due to battery problems.

The flight took off from Addis Ababa on Saturday and headed to Nairobi.

"I am very happy to see the airplane is back to the air now and I am very happy also we are the first one," Ethiopian Airlines CEO, Tewolde Gebremariam told journalists ahead of take off.

The US Federal Aviation Authority on Thursday issued formal approval of Boeing's 787 battery fix, clearing the way for the troubled aircraft to fly again after the prolonged grounding.

The directive from the FAA to ground the 50 Dreamliners in operation worldwide came after a series of safety scares with the aircraft, including an emergency landing by Japan's All Nippon Airways in January following a battery malfunction.

Ethiopian Airlines has four Dreamliners, which Gebremariam said would all resume service in the coming weeks after being retrofitted with new batteries.

"This is the first airplane which has completed the work," he told reporters, adding that work has started on the company's other three 787s.

Each of the aircraft are set to receive a new battery, which is encased, allowing the plane to continue flying in the event of a malfunction.

"We've fixed the battery, we've now contained the battery, so for some chance that there is a failure with the battery, it's contained, it's isolated, the airplane will be able to continue flying," Boeing's VP of Marketing for commercial airplanes, Randy Tinseth, said at the airport.

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Despite the previous safety scares with the aircraft, he said customers have no reason to feel nervous about flying the Dreamliner.

"I can't wait to get back on the aircraft, and I wouldn't hesitate to bring my family on it," he said.

The three-month grounding of the 50-strong fleet has not translated to major financial losses for the US-based Boeing Company. On Wednesday Boeing reported a 20 per cent year-on-year jump in first-quarter profit.

The 787 headed back to Addis Ababa - some 1160 km from the Kenyan capital - later on Saturday, airline officials said.

Passenger Francois Vaillancourt said he was "not at all" nervous about flying on the first commercial flight since the fleet was grounded.

"Airlines are safest after they've had a problem, so they fixed it and it is probably three times as safe as it was before," he said.

Ethiopian Airlines is the first African carrier to operate the Dreamliner.

In addition to the four Dreamliners which were in operation before January, Ethiopian Airlines has six more on order from Boeing. The full fleet is expected to arrive by the end of 2014, including one that will be delivered in June.

Meanwhile, a Dreamliner test flight with top Boeing and All Nippon Airways' executives aboard has landed at a Tokyo airport.

ANA chairman Shinichiro Ito and Boeing chief executive Ray Conner were aboard the aircraft which landed back in Tokyo at around 11am local time on Sunday after a two-hour flight as Boeing and ANA seek to reassure passengers that the planes are safe.

ANA has the world's largest fleet of the next-generation planes and the presence of both executives underscores their desire to put the damaging crisis behind them.

Speaking in Tokyo on Saturday, Mike Sinnett, Boeing's chief project manager for the Dreamliner program, said the Japanese test flight showed the faith the US aircraft manufacturer placed in the battery fix.

ANA and domestic rival Japan Airlines (JAL) account for around half the 50 Dreamliners in service worldwide. But it could still be at least a month before they can complete all the battery fixes and get their planes in the air.

AFP

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