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Airbus A320 Grounding: Software Update Concerns Rise

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

Airbus A320 Fleet Faces Potential Grounding for Software⁢ Update Following​ JetBlue Incident

WASHINGTON D.C. ⁤- ‍Airbus has ​issued a precautionary alert to operators of A320 family aircraft worldwide, potentially grounding a important portion of the fleet ‌for a software update.The action follows⁤ an incident on a JetBlue​ flight where a computer‍ issue triggered​ a sudden, uncommanded descent, prompting investigations into a potential vulnerability related to intense solar radiation corrupting flight control data.

The issue affects ⁤Airbus A320 ⁣family aircraft – including the A319, A320, and ⁢A321 ⁢models – and stems from ⁢concerns that strong solar flares could disrupt​ critical ​flight control systems.While the exact ​scope ⁣of the disruption remains unclear,airbus has acknowledged the ‍recommended software and/or hardware protection​ measures⁣ will “lead to operational disruptions to passengers and ‍customers.” ‍The‌ Federal aviation Administration ⁤(FAA) ‍is ⁣currently working with Airbus on a ⁢plan ⁤to address the issue, with the expectation that each​ aircraft ⁤will​ require several ⁢hours for the​ update.

According to ⁣aviation analyst⁤ JonNYC ​(@xJonc on Twitter), the ⁣issue⁣ is confirmed as requiring a software update. “I consider ⁢this ​fully confirmed at this⁣ point. ELAC , software update needed,” he posted on November 28, 2025.​ “Should take ⁢a couple ⁣hours for each ‍plane, ⁤will ​take longer on some than others.⁢ Plan with ‌FAA being ⁢worked on now.”

Airbus stated ​that it has “worked​ proactively with the aviation authorities to request ‍immediate precautionary⁢ action from operators ‍via ⁤an Alert ⁢Operators Transmission (AOT)‌ to implement the available software and/or hardware ​protection, and ⁣ensure the fleet is safe ⁤to fly.” The ⁤companyS statement⁤ described the ​potential for data corruption in flight controls ‍due to “intense solar radiation.”

The potential grounding echoes concerns⁣ raised after ‌the 2018 and 2019 Boeing 737 MAX crashes, which were linked to a faulty ‍Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS). Though,‌ initial assessments suggest the⁤ current Airbus issue‍ is less severe, with ‌expectations of⁣ “minor and phased” cancellations unless the problem proves more significant. As of November 28,2025,flights scheduled‍ for tomorrow utilizing the affected aircraft have not yet shown cancellations. Specific details regarding ⁤timing and flight cancellations are expected to be released shortly.

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