Dramatic illustration of JetBlue A320 sudden dive injuring passengers due to solar-induced software flaw, amid Airbus global recall.
Dramatic illustration of JetBlue A320 sudden dive injuring passengers due to solar-induced software flaw, amid Airbus global recall.
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Airbus recalls 6000 planes due to software flaw

Image generated by AI

Airbus has identified a software flaw in its A320 planes that can be affected by intense solar radiation, prompting the recall of about 6000 aircraft worldwide. An incident on October 30 involving a JetBlue flight led to sudden altitude loss and injuries to at least 15 people. The measures are expected to cause flight disruptions for several major airlines.

Airbus announced on the evening of November 28, 2025, that a software flaw in A320 aircraft requires immediate action. The issue, which can arise from intense solar radiation affecting the planes' control systems, was discovered following an incident on October 30. A JetBlue Airways flight from New Jersey to Tampa Bay suddenly lost altitude, injuring at least 15 people and forcing an emergency landing.

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has issued an Emergency Airworthiness Directive applicable to all global operators. Approximately 6000 planes are affected, representing half of Airbus's A320 fleet. For about two-thirds of the aircraft, it means a short-term flight ban while reverting to an older software version. Around 1000 planes, however, require hardware replacement, potentially grounding them for several weeks.

Several airlines are impacted. Air France is canceling 35 flights, while Delta, Air India, American Airlines, EasyJet, Lufthansa, and Wizz Air warn of disruptions. SAS, operating up to 90 A320s, is fully complying with the directive and stresses safety as the top priority: “The safety of our passengers and colleagues is always our highest priority. SAS is aware of the so-called Emergency Airworthiness Directive from EASA... We will provide updates as soon as we have more information.” Finnair is updating 12 planes and canceled flight AY1339 to London. Norwegian is unaffected.

Airbus states: “Airbus is aware that these recommendations will lead to operational disruptions for passengers and customers. We apologize for the inconvenience caused and will work closely with operators, with safety as our highest priority.”

What people are saying

Discussions on X highlight Airbus's precautionary action on around 6000 A320-family aircraft due to solar radiation potentially corrupting flight control software, triggered by a JetBlue incident injuring passengers. Opinions range from concerns over global flight disruptions and skepticism about an undetected flaw in a proven design, to expert explanations of space weather vulnerabilities and appreciation for swift safety measures by regulators and airlines.

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Grounded Avianca A320 planes at Colombian airport undergoing software updates for Airbus solar radiation flaw, with technicians at work under dramatic sunset.
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