Air Serbia Flight 324

On 18 February 2024, an Embraer E195 operated by Marathon Airlines on behalf of Air Serbia, scheduled to fly an international passenger flight from Belgrade to Düsseldorf overran the runway while taking off, subsequently striking multiple ground structures before climbing and returning to the airport. All 111 people on board the aircraft were uninjured. The aircraft was subsequently written off.[1][2]

Air Serbia Flight 324
OY-GDC, the aircraft involved in the accident, photographed in January 2024.
Accident
Date18 February 2024 (2024-02-18)
SummaryRunway excursion due to pilot error, under investigation
SiteBelgrade Nikola Tesla Airport, Belgrade, Serbia
44°49′39.8″N 20°17′18.5″E / 44.827722°N 20.288472°E / 44.827722; 20.288472
Aircraft
Aircraft typeEmbraer E195
OperatorMarathon Airlines, on behalf of Air Serbia
IATA flight No.JU324
ICAO flight No.ASL324
Call signAIR SERBIA 324
RegistrationOY-GDC
Flight originBelgrade Nikola Tesla Airport, Belgrade, Serbia
DestinationDüsseldorf Airport, Düsseldorf, Germany
Occupants111
Passengers105
Crew6
Fatalities0
Injuries0
Survivors111

Accident

Flight 324 was to take off from Belgrade for a 2-hour, 10-minute flight to Düsseldorf. However, during its takeoff run, the aircraft overran the runway and struck multiple airport approach lights and the instrument landing system before eventually becoming airborne. The aircraft suffered severe damage to its fuselage, left wing root, and left stabilizer. The plane returned to Belgrade and landed safely without any further incident, with no injuries reported among the 111 occupants.[1]

Aircraft

The aircraft involved was a 15-year-old Embraer 195, registered as OY-GDC with manufacturer serial number 19000204 and was first delivered to Flybe on August 2008.[3] The aircraft is powered by two General Electric CF34 engines.[3][4]

Aftermath

Air Serbia

As a result of the accident, Air Serbia terminated its wet-lease agreement with Marathon Airlines on 21 February and retired its entire Embraer fleet.[5][6]

Aircraft

After the incident, the aircraft suffered significant damage and was eventually written off. Subsequently, it was confirmed that the aircraft would be scrapped and recycled for spare parts.[2] This is the third Embraer E195 hull loss after a Kalstar Aviation E195 overran the runway at Kupang, Indonesia, back in December 2015,[7] and a Nordic Aviation Capital E195 caught fire at Juan Santamaría International Airport back in March 2022.[8]

Investigation

According to the preliminary report from Serbia's Center for Investigation of Accidents in Transport, there were no mechanical issues with the aircraft or engines. The report indicates that air traffic control instructed the crew to proceed to the D6 taxiway intersection with Runway 30L for take-off from Runway 30L. However, the crew actually exited at the D5 intersection. Air traffic control informed the crew of this and informed them that the available runway length from D5 was 1,273 metres (4,177 ft). Air traffic control then asked if the crew would like to backtrack to the D6 intersection. The crew performed calculations and informed air traffic control that the plane could take off from the D5 position. The crew then received take-off clearance. However, as the plane accelerated past 100 knots (185 km/h; 115 mph), the crew realized that there was insufficient runway length to take off. Nevertheless, the crew did not abort the take-off. As a result, as the plane took off, it struck the approach lights to Runway 12R and the antennas for the airport's instrument landing system.[9]

See also

  • Runway excursion
  • China Southern Airlines Flight 3367 - Another incident where a 737-800 struck obstacles on takeoff back in 2013.[10]

References

External links