South African Civil Aviation Authority attributes helicopter crash to 'unsecured' penguin in the cabin
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
Last Wednesday, the South African Civil Aviation Authority (SACAA) reported that a low-altitude crash of a Robinson R44 Raven II helicopter on Bird Island was caused by unsecured carriage of a penguin. The incident occurred as the helicopter was taking off the Bird Island, with intention to proceed to Port Elizabeth, and didn't result in any injuries for the pilot, three human passengers, or the penguin; the helicopter suffered extensive damage.
Image: Matti Blume.
Image: BFK Vöcklabruck.
The SACAA's incident report said the pilot and three human passengers safely landed on Bird Island, off the Eastern Cape, on January 19 after conducting the aerial survey that was the purpose of the flight, and a passenger described as a "specialist" placed a penguin from the island in a cardboard box and brought it aboard the aircraft.
"The pilot conducted a risk assessment of the flight; however, he omitted to include the carriage (transportation) of the penguin on-board," the report said.
The passenger occupying the left front seat of the helicopter put the box on his lap, but he lost his grip on it just after take-off and the box slid into the pilot's cyclic pitch control lever as the helicopter was approximately 15m above the ground. The lever was pushed to the far-right position, causing the helicopter to roll to the right. The pilot could not recover in time and the helicopter's main rotor blades struck the ground, causing the accident to occur at location with GPS coordinates 33°50′22.65″ South, 026°17′26.79″ East, at an elevation of 2 feet (ft), approximately 20m from lift-off.
The report said the helicopter, which landed on its side, "sustained serious damage, but no human or penguin passengers were harmed. [...] The lack of secure containment for the penguin created a dangerous situation. The absence of a proper, secured crate meant that the penguin's containment was not suitable for the flight conditions."
Bird Island is one of the six key African penguin breeding colonies. They were protected following a landmark court order in South Africa in March 2025. It imposed no-fishing zones around the breeding colonies to prevent so-called purse seine fishing vessels, which use large nets for catching sardines and anchovies, from operating in the area for the next 10 years.
Sources
[edit]- Ben Hooper. "Helicopter crash in South Africa blamed on 'unsecured' penguin" — UPI, April 11, 2025
- Emma Rossiter. "Unsecured penguin caused helicopter crash in South Africa" — BBC, April 10, 2025
- "Limited occurrence investigation report" — South African Civil Aviation Authority, April 9, 2025
- Gabby Colenso. "Last-minute deal to protect African penguins from extinction" — BBC, March 19, 2025