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Alaska Airlines aircraft terminates launch to prevent accident with Southwest jet

An Alaska Airlines airplane aborted departure on a runway at Tennessee's Nashville International Airport on Thursday to prevent a potential collision with a Southwest Airlines jet, the airline company said.

Alaska Airlines 369, a Boeing 737 MAX 9 airplane with 176 travelers and six team on board, aborted takeoff around 9:15 a.m. ET (1315 GMT) due to a potential traffic conflict after it had gotten clearance for launch from air traffic control, the airline company said.

The Federal Air travel Administration stated Southwest Airlines Flight 2029-- a Boeing 737-700-- had been cleared to cross the end of the very same runway and the firm is examining the occurrence.

The Alaska pilots immediately used the brakes to avoid the incident from escalating, the carrier added. The aircraft had been arranged to fly to Seattle, and travelers were being relocated to a new aircraft.

The FAA and Alaska stated the 737 MAX 9's tires were blown during braking.

Southwest did not right away comment. Alaska said maintenance professionals in Nashville were examining the airplane.

In 2015, a series of near-miss incidents raised issues about U.S. aviation security and the stress on understaffed air traffic control operations.

FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker informed reporters on Wednesday that the number of serious runway attack incidents had actually fallen by over 50% but we continue to work the concern by developing more innovation for controllers, more innovation in the arrival centers.

In June, the National Transportation Security Board discovered that inaccurate assumptions on the part of an air traffic controller caused a February 2023 near-collision in between a FedEx plane and a Southwest aircraft in Austin, Texas.

The 2 planes came within about 170 feet (52 meters) of each other when the FedEx Boeing 767 was required to fly over the Southwest 737-700 to prevent a crash in bad presence conditions.

NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said in June the board desires low-visibility training for controllers and faster deployment of technology at airports and cockpit notifies to prevent future near-collisions.

This should serve as a wake-up call to many-- these are alerting signs which suggests do something about it now, Homendy stated.

(source: Reuters)