
The crew of a transatlantic flight had to dump thousands of litres of aviation fuel before diverting to Shannon Airport this afternoon with an ill passenger.
Air France flight AF-178 was en route from Paris to Mexico City and was about 200 kilometres south of Cork when the crew declared a medical emergency at around 11.40am.
Air France #AF178 Paris-Mexico City (A380 F-HPJI) just diverted Shannon w/ medical emergency. FS also inspecting poss. fuel leak (ATC). pic.twitter.com/YsmQZXuEEE
— Airport Webcams (@AirportWebcams) November 4, 2017
There were 543 passengers and crew on board.
The crew of Airbus A380-800 Superjumbo declared a medical emergency radio message confirming they required to dump aviation fuel and divert to Shannon.
The crew also asked the emergency medical services be standing by for their arrival.
The crew confirmed they required 15 minutes to dump fuel to ensure they touched down within safe landing weight limits.
UPDATE #AF178 diverted to SNN due to med emergency but suffered fuel leak after probable fuel dumping process (credit Oisín Tierney) pic.twitter.com/KA2IDPG92y
— AIRLIVE (@airlivenet) November 4, 2017
Airport fire crews were standing by for the jet which is standard procedure at Shannon if an aircraft has jettisoned fuel or has to make an overweight landing.
The flight landed safely at 12.10pm and taxied to a remote parking area accompanied by airport emergency crews.
The passenger was removed to University Hospital Limerick for treatment.
The flight was expected to resume its journey to Mexico later in the afternoon.






