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Air India grounded Boeing Dreamliner after possible fuel control switch defect

Air India announced on Monday that it has grounded a Boeing Dreamliner aircraft after one of its pilots reported an alleged defect in the fuel control switch of the aircraft, which is currently at center of an investigation into a fatal air crash last summer.

The airline didn't specify the nature or flight details. Two sources claim that the pilot reported the problem after landing in Bengaluru, a southern Indian city after departing from London.

Air India announced that "after receiving this initial information we have ground?the aircraft", adding that they were in contact with Boeing "on priority basis".

Boeing stated that it was supporting Air India.

According to Flightradar24, the airline owns 33 Dreamliners.

Fuel switches were at the heart of last year's crash of an Air India Dreamliner in Gujarat, which resulted in the deaths of 260 people. This led to a tightening of scrutiny on the airline.

Fuel switches control the flow of fuel into an aircraft's engine. The fuel switches are used by the pilots to shut down engines on the ground, or manually restart or shut down engines in case of an engine failure during flight.

Report on preliminary findings

On the crash of last year, it was reported that the fuel cutoff switches on the engines had been flipped almost simultaneously, depriving them of fuel.

Air India, owned by Tata Group and Singapore Airlines said it had notified India's aviation regulator of the latest incident.

A spokesperson from the regulator didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment.

Air India confirmed that it had tested the fuel control switches of all Boeing 787s in its fleet following a directive by the regulator last summer and found no problems. (Reporting and editing by Louise Heavens, Gareth Jones and Abhijith Ganapavaram)

(source: Reuters)