Bright orange objects ruled out as hunt continues for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370
Jennifer Rajca, Paul Toohey in Perth and Cindy Wockner in Kuala Lumpur
News Corp Australia
1 hour ago
March 31, 2014 8:05PM
Tony Abbott visits MH370 search headquarters in Perth, saying Australia will keep looking for the missing plane, for the sake of the families
ORANGE objects spotted by a plane searching for the missing Malaysia Airlines jet have turned out to be nothing more than fishing equipment, as prime minister Tony Abbott declared there’s no time limit on the search for MH370.
The Australian Maritime Safety Authority said the objects had been analysed and spokesman Jesse Platts said “they have nothing to do with the missing flight.’’
An Australian P-3 Orion search plane spotted at least four orange objects in waters west of Perth on Sunday and were described by Orion pilot Russell Adams as the most promising lead in the search so far.
But despite yet another false alarm, Mr Abbott said the search will not be scaled down.
“I’m certainly not putting a time limit on it ... We can keep searching for quite some time to come,’’ Abbott told reporters today at RAAF Pearce, the Perth military base coordinating the operation.
“We owe it to the families, we owe it to everyone that travels by air, we owe it to the anxious governments of the countries who had people on that aircraft. We owe it to the wider world which has been transfixed by this mystery for three weeks now.’’
The Australian vessel with the job MH370 conducted sea trials of hi-tech detection equipment today before its 1850km journey to a tract of the southern Indian Ocean west of Perth.
The trials included a US Navy black box detector, an unmanned underwater vehicle and other acoustic detection equipment.
While the support vessel Ocean Shield is expected to take up to four days to reach the huge, 319,000 square kilometre search zone, another navy ship, the frigate HMAS Toowoomba, at top speed reached the area by mid-morning today after two days at sea.
Malaysian Guided Missile Frigate KD Lekiu arrived at HMAS Stirling this evening to receive briefings on the MH370 search operations west of Perth.
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A P3 Orion helping in the search. Source: AP
It’s a race against time, given the box’s low-frequency acoustic beacon has a limited battery life. That has extended from an estimated 30 days to roughly 45 days, according to Captain Mark Matthews, a US Navy equipment specialist.
“These are rated to last 30 days, but that is a minimum. In my experience, they do last a little bit longer than that,’’ Capt Matthews said yesterday.
But the operation remained an extraordinarily difficult exercise, Mr Abbott said.
“We are searching a vast area of ocean and working with quite limited information,’’ he said after touring the Pearce base, where search planes from seven nations are being deployed, involving 550 personnel.
Defence Minister David Johnston said about 1000 sailors were looking for debris at sea - but the task was still onerous.
While each country involved was currently bearing its own costs, Australia was paying for running the co-ordination centre, which will have about 20 staff and be led by retired air chief marshall Angus Houston from Perth CBD headquarters.
Mr Abbott also said his Malaysian counterpart was not too hasty in announcing last week - before any debris had been recovered or confirmed as being from MH370 - that the plane was lost in the southern Indian Ocean and all on board were assumed dead.
“That’s the absolute overwhelming weight of evidence and I think that Prime Minister Najib Razak was perfectly entitled to come to that conclusion,’’ he said.
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