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Storm that shook Scoot flight not detected on weather radar: Report
The Straits Times
|October 19, 2025
2024 incident that seriously hurt passenger and cabin crew member deemed an accident

Scoot has updated its guidelines for operating in areas affected by typhoons, says the Transport Safety Investigation Bureau report. PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO
(LIANHE ZAOBAO)
The turbulence that shook a Scoot flight bound for Guangzhou from Singapore in September 2024, seriously injuring two, was likely due to a storm cell that did not appear on the plane’s weather radar.
Flight TR100, carrying 339 passengers and headed for Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport, was hit by turbulence during its descent at about 8.40am on Sept 6, 2024. The seat-belt sign was off.
Although Super Typhoon Yagi made landfall in Guangdong - of which Guangzhou is the capital - on the same day, it was far away and did not lead to the turbulence.
These details were made public in a Transport Safety Investigation Bureau (TSIB) report dated Oct 4. The TSIB, a department in the Ministry of Transport, classified the occurrence as an accident.
The storm cell, situated behind the Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner wide-body jet, was not detected by its weather radar, which is typically positioned at the nose of an aircraft to detect weather ahead.
The storm cell was also not visible from the cockpit windows.
The accident prompted Scoot to review its guidelines for operating in areas affected by typhoons, the report revealed.
Scoot’s updated guidelines state that seat-belt signs must be on from takeoff until the point in a flight where an aircraft finishes its climb and transitions to cruising at its planned altitude. The sign must also be on from the point where a flight starts descending.
Scoot also issued instructions on Oct 14, 2024, requiring flight and cabin crew to remind passengers to keep their seat belts fastened while seated and to avoid moving around when the signs are on, according to the report.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition October 19, 2025 de The Straits Times.
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