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Oct 25, 2025

Hong Kong investigators recover “black boxes” from deadly cargo-plane crash, vow quick safety review

Hong Kong investigators recover “black boxes” from deadly cargo-plane crash, vow quick safety review
Hong Kong’s Air Accident Investigation Authority (AAIA) confirmed on 25 October 2025 that its salvage team has retrieved both the cockpit-voice recorder and flight-data recorder from the freight Boeing 747 that veered off course and ditched into the waters off Chek Lap Kok on 20 October, killing two security couriers on board. The devices—commonly called “black boxes”—were recovered after the Airport Authority’s heavy-lift barges raised the torn tail section late Friday night. They were immediately transferred to an AAIA laboratory for data extraction and preliminary read-outs are expected within a week.

Although passenger flights were not directly involved, the incident caused 14 hours of runway closures and the cancellation or diversion of more than 230 passenger and cargo services earlier in the week. Global forwarders shipping high-value electronics through Hong Kong International Airport (HKIA) reported average lead-time extensions of 24-36 hours and have begun contingency planning that includes routing time-critical consignments through Shenzhen Bao’an and Macau. Airlines are also reassessing crew-training protocols for rejected take-off procedures in wet-runway conditions—an issue suspected to have contributed to the crash.

The AAIA said a factual preliminary report will be released within 30 days, while a full safety investigation, conducted under ICAO Annex 13 rules, could take up to 12 months. Insurers estimate hull and cargo losses at US$120 million, the largest single aviation claim in Hong Kong since Cathay Dragon’s A321 incident in 2010. Logisticians warn that if the final report highlights systemic maintenance lapses, regulators across Asia-Pacific may impose tighter oversight on all-cargo operators, potentially reducing belly-hold capacity for exporters in the coming peak season.

For companies that rely on just-in-time supply chains, the episode is a reminder to diversify routings and maintain emergency stock in the Greater Bay Area. Travel-risk managers are advising corporate travellers to pad itineraries through HKIA for the next fortnight in case runway inspections or further recovery work cause ad-hoc slot reductions.
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