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Air India crash report delayed due to unfinished engine examination, Bloomberg News reports

Bloomberg News reported that investigators would miss the deadline of Friday to?explain? why an Air India plane crashed. This is because the engines of the Boeing 787 aircraft still need to be examined in the U.S.

The report cited people who were familiar with the situation as saying that the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau of India (AAIB), will likely release a status update this week focusing on the reasons for the delay. Air India 787, headed for London on June 12, 2025 crashed shortly after takeoff in Ahmedabad.?260 people were killed in the deadliest air disaster of the decade.

Bloomberg News reported that a final report should be completed within three months for the GE Aerospace 'engines. The examination is taking place in the U.S. as there are only a handful of places worldwide that have the 'necessary tool and can dismantle the engines properly.

First reported last month, Indian officials investigating the crash prepared an interim report instead of a final report ahead of the first anniversary because they deemed the investigation complex and time-consuming.

Internationally, the final report should be submitted within one year after an accident. However, investigations can take longer. If this is not possible, a statement interim should be released on each anniversary.

AAIB, India’s aviation ministry, Air India and the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board did not respond immediately to'requests for comments.

The crash occurred at an important stage in Air India's post-privatisation turnaround. This was slowed down by supply-chain problems, the Iran War, and a Pakistani airspace ban on Indian carriers.

PRELIMINARY REPORT

The 787's fuel control switches were found to have been switched from "Run" to "CUTOFF" almost simultaneously, starving the engines of fuel soon after takeoff.

According to an early assessment by U.S. officials last year, a cockpit recording of the dialogue between the pilots supports the idea that the captain stopped the flow of fuel to the plane's engine. AAIB stated that it was "too early" to draw any conclusions.

The father of the Captain asked India's highest court to order a independent investigation that considered other causes than deliberate pilot actions, which was suspected in other fatal crashes and confirmed by the case of Germanwings 2015.

According to a letter seen by the.

The group of pilots also asked investigators to obtain more technical information on the plane from Boeing and Air India in order to "refute the theory that the AAIB is exploring about the pilot's suicide."

The preliminary report made no safety recommendations for Boeing or GE at the time, indicating that there were no technical problems. Reporting by Chris Thomas in Mexico City and Carlos Mendez, Abhijith Ganapavaram in New Delhi. Editing by Jamie Freed.

(source: Reuters)