Malaysia to Resume MH370 Search in Indian Ocean
Ocean Infinity will conduct a 55-day intermittent deep-sea search in a 15,000 sq km Indian Ocean zone under a no-find, no-fee contract worth $70 million if wreckage is found.
- Malaysia's transport ministry said on Wednesday the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 will resume on December 30, 2025.
- Long ago, the Boeing 777 vanished on March 8, 2014, and earlier multinational searches failed to find Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 despite debris washing ashore; the most recent southern Indian Ocean search was suspended in April.
- Malaysia's government approved a no-find, no-fee contract, with Ocean Infinity to search intermittently for 55 days in a 15,000-square-kilometer seabed site, contingent on a $70 million payment.
- Malaysia said the restart underscores its commitment to provide closure to the families of the missing, while remembrance events displayed the names of crew and passengers on the tenth anniversary.
- Search planners focused on specific ocean zones informed by satellite tracking, as satellite data showed the plane turned south to the far-southern Indian Ocean, guiding targeted areas believed to have the highest likelihood.
291 Articles
291 Articles
Search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 to resume after more than a decade
Malaysia will restart the search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 on Dec. 30, more than ten years after the aircraft vanished during its 2014 flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people on board.
The Ministry of Transport of Malaysia announced today that a private company will continue the search for Malaysia Airlines flight number 370, which disappeared in 2014.
No blush, no black box, no body: since 2014, Malaysia Airlines' flight has fed all the hypothesis. By relaunching the search, Malaysia hopes to close the file.
Search efforts resume for long-missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370
A deep-sea hunt for a Malaysia Airlines jet that went missing in 2014 will resume at the end of the year, Malaysia's transport ministry said Wednesday. The aircraft vanished on March 8, 2014, carrying 239 passengers, primarily Chinese nationals. Officials say the plane was traveling from Malaysia to Beijing when it deviated from its route and headed toward the far-southern Indian Ocean, where officials believe it crashed. New search efforts Th…
Will one of the greatest mysteries in aviation history be solved?
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