Buttigieg hammered for doing nothing to stop 5G airline chaos

By Bob Unruh

Just as America’s new 5G cell telephone network was launched, partially, this week, major airlines canceled flights amid fears the signals could interfere with key airliner systems, such as the altimeter, and cause them to crash.

And Timothy Clark, chief of the United Arab Emirates carrier Emirates, blamed the Biden administration, and specifically Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, for the disastrous development.

“I need to be as candid as I normally am and say this is one of the most delinquent, utterly irresponsible issues I’ve seen in my aviation career because it involves organs of government, manufacturers, science,” Clark charged in a report in the Daily Mail.

Pete Buttigieg (MSNBC video screenshot)
Pete Buttigieg (MSNBC video screenshot)

The 5G system was turned on, partly, this week. Its towers around many airports remained locked down because of concerns over potential conflicts with airliner operations.

Clark said the events turned into chaos.

The Daily Mail report confirmed AT&T and Verizon turned on some 4,500 towers across the country for the new system.

But, the report explained, “They had to hold back on 10% of the towers – 500 – that are near airports because the frequencies the towers emit could interfere with the signal on some planes.”

Some airports have developed “buffers” to protect jets, but major airports like Denver, Boston, Memphis, Houston and Atlanta, have not, the report said.

The result of canceled flights by not just Emirates, but a long list of other airlines too, left passengers stranded from coast to coast.

“In total, 239 flights to, from and within the U.S. have been canceled so far. It’s unclear if all have been scrapped because of 5G, but the network launch is causing major issues,” the report said.

Some of the canceled flights were brought back into the schedule, but the result of some flights off, some on left the chaos.

Chiefs of America’s airlines, many of which have pricey contracts with the government, said the compromise that allowed the system to power up while protecting areas around airports was good.

But Clark blasted the Biden administration for igniting the potential firestorm of problems by rolling out the 5G system “without addressing the safety fears of the aviation industry first.”

He said airlines weren’t even made aware of the threat until this week.

Buttigieg, who was blasted by critics for taking two months of paternity leave last year as the world supply chain problem threatened hazards for multiple economies, commented earlier this week that the government was “aware” of the issues.

Pete Buttigieg
Pete Buttigieg

The Daily Mail reported Delta was expected to cancel some flights, Emirates canceled all flights involving Boston, Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, Miami, Newark, New Jersey, Orlando, Florida, San Francisco and Seattle indefinitely, All Nippon was canceling some flights to the U.S., Japan Airlines canceled both passenger and cargo flights Wednesday, Air India was dropping flights involving New York, San Francisco and Chicago, British Airways canceled connections to Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, and San Francisco, and Cathay Pacific, Korean Airlines, Austrian Airlines and Lufthansa were swapping airplanes on specific flights.

Clark warned, however, “‘The notion that, for instance, the United States government should sell its franchise for all the frequencies for a large amount of money … somebody should have told them at the time – that the risks and the dangers they placed in certain frequency uses around field, airfields, metropolitan fields that should have been done at the time.”

He said the radio frequency conflict could affect not only radio altimeter systems, but also “the flight control systems on the fly-by-wire aircraft.”

In a statement, United Airlines explained, “‘We’re pleased the Biden administration reached a compromise with AT&T and Verizon to avoid mass cancellations across the aviation industry. We look forward to a higher level of coordination between the regulators, telecom companies and the aviation industry to ensure that customers are not faced with disruptions going forward.”

But it had canceled dozens of flights already.

A permanent solution remained unclear.

The Daily Mail reported, “Lacking an immediate solution, passengers and airlines are bracing for further delays and cancellations as the travel chaos shows no sign of stopping.”

The report explained the problem was especially concerning for some airliners, such as the Boeing 777.

The report noted AT&T and Verizon have spent tens of billions of dollars to license the 3.7 to 3.98 GHz frequency range.

It continued:

The C-band is a portion of the electromagnetic spectrum in the microwave range of frequencies ranging from 4.0 to 8.0 gigahertz (GHz), although the US Federal Communications Commission has designated 3.7-4.2 GHz as C band too.

The problem is that wireless spectrum used by 5G networks could interfere with radio altimeters, which measure a plane’s altitude – especially important for low-visibility operations.

Airlines fear that C-band 5G signals will disrupt planes’ navigation systems, particularly those used in bad weather.

This interference with radio altimeters, which measure a plane’s altitude, could lead to the loss of radar altitude information or, worse, incorrect radar altitude information unknowingly being generated, they say.

The radio altimeters operate in the 4.2-4.4 GHz band. In Europe the cell system runs in the 3.4-3.8Ghz range, while in the U.S. it’s up to 3.98GHz.

Airline officials at the beginning of the week “begged” the Biden administration to stop AT&T and Verizon from rolling out their new systems at airports, the report said.

The fight had has the Federal Communications Commission and cell companies on one side, and the Federal Aviation Administration and airlines on the other.

The 5G system is the latest version of digital communications that came about in the 1990s. It is expected to be 100 times faster than the current system, while would make mobile operations as fast as office-based web connections.

But the report noted other potential conflicts are pending with medevac helicopters, too.

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Bob Unruh

Bob Unruh joined WND in 2006 after nearly three decades with the Associated Press, as well as several Upper Midwest newspapers, where he covered everything from legislative battles and sports to tornadoes and homicidal survivalists. He is also a photographer whose scenic work has been used commercially. Read more of Bob Unruh's articles here.


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