Melbourne Airport Runway Safety Alert After Near-Collision Incidents

November 11, 2025
Melbourne Airport Runway Safety Alert After Near-Collision Incidents
  • The Australian Transport Safety Bureau found that crews failed to adequately absorb or act on a temporary runway-length reduction at Melbourne Airport, despite written notices and airport audio updates, due to expectations, workload, and time pressure.

  • Airservices Australia and the Civil Aviation Safety Authority are proposing changes to air traffic control procedures to improve the communication of runway-length information.

  • The incidents triggered an investigation into communication and situational awareness around runway changes, highlighting risks to ground staff and aircraft performance during takeoff.

  • Warnings about take-off conditions were incomplete, with NOTAMs and ATIS/automatic terminal information system updates not being properly acted on by flight crews.

  • Following the first incident, Melbourne Airport issued a safety alert to all airlines and questioned Malaysia Airlines, signaling a prompt safety response to the near-misses.

  • In September 2023, two near-collision takeoffs occurred when runways were temporarily shortened during night-time resurfacing, nearly putting aircraft in conflict with ground vehicles.

  • The incidents involved a Malaysia Airlines Airbus A330-300 and a Bamboo Airways Boeing 787-9, with the former overrunning the runway by about seven meters and the latter lifting off just 4.5 meters from ground staff, though no injuries occurred.

  • The runway was shortened from a full length of 3,657 meters to 2,089 meters, and each near-miss involved takeoff overshoots spaced 11 days apart.

  • Airlines updated dispatcher procedures in response, and ICAO introduced standards for highly visible signage to alert crews to temporary runway changes; Australia’s authorities are considering improvements to aerodrome information delivery to flight crews.

  • The safety bureau underscored the need for clear, timely notices and checks so crews and ground staff are aware of temporary runway configurations to prevent similar near-misses.

  • ATSB described the events as a near-disaster, prompting a broader risk review and calls for clearer, timely dissemination of information.

  • The ATSB chief described the incidents as serious and dangerous, noting near-misses occurred with fully loaded aircraft near large ground personnel, with luck averting catastrophe.

Summary based on 3 sources


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