Malaysia today said it would share with Australia the cost of the latest effort to uncover signs of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, in the hope of unlocking modern aviation’s greatest mystery.
Months of searches have failed to turn up any trace of the missing Boeing 777 aircraft, which disappeared on March 8th, carrying 239 passengers and crew shortly after taking off from the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur, bound for Beijing.
Malaysian transport minister Liow Tiong Lai told a news conference in Canberra that the two countries would evenly split the costs of the new search phase, estimated at up to A$52 million (€36.9 million).
“So it is important here that we would like to thank Australia for leading this search and we have so far committed and spent about A$50 million and we are also going to match the Australians in the tender cost for the search,” he said.
The latest phase of the search has seen the area being examined being refined. This phase is expected to start within a month and take up to a year, focusing on a 60,000sqkm patch of sea floor some 1,600km west of Perth.
Australian deputy prime minister Warren Truss said new information suggested that the jetliner may have turned south earlier than previously believed and that as a result, the search would focus on the southern area of the zone.
That information, he told reporters, was based in part on an attempt to map the position of the plane at the time of a failed satellite telephone call by Malaysia Airlines on the ground to the jetliner.
“The search area remains the same but some of the areas, some of the information we now have suggests to us that areas a little further to the south - within the search area but a little further to the south - may be of particular interest and priority in the search area,” Mr Truss told reporters.
Australia this month awarded a contract to Dutch engineering firm Fugro to search the sea floor, and the company is already conducting a detailed underwater mapping of the search area, along with a Chinese naval vessel.
Fugro will use two vessels equipped with side scan sonar, multibeam echo sounders and video cameras to scour the seafloor, which is close to 5,000m deep in places.
Australia has set aside A$80 million to A$90 million for the search, already the most expensive ever undertaken.
Malaysia Airlines has been hit this year by the loss of two of its airliners, after Flight MH17 was shot down over a conflict zone in eastern Ukraine.
Reuters