Flat light a factor in Nunavut helicopter crash that injured 3 people, TSB says - Action News
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Flat light a factor in Nunavut helicopter crash that injured 3 people, TSB says

Flat-light conditions contributed to the crash of of a helicopter on Devon Island, about 100 kilometres from Grise Fiord, Nunavut, last June, according to report by the Transportation Safety Board of Canada.

Flight went down on glacier on Devon Island last June

The wreckage of a crashed helicopter lies on its side on an icy, snowy expanse.
A photo posted to Facebook last summer by Devon Manik shows a helicopter that crashed on Devon Island, Nunavut, on June 28. Three people suffered minor injuries in the crash. (Submitted by Devon Manik)

Flat-light conditions contributed to the crash of a helicopter on Devon Island, about 100 kilometres from Grise Fiord, Nunavut, last summer, according to report released today by the Transportation Safety Board of Canada (TSB).

The incident happened on June 28, 2023, and involveda Bell 206L helicopter carrying a pilot and two passengers. The three people on board all survived the crash with injuries.

According to the TSB report, the helicopter left Truelove Inlet, on Devon Island, fora glacier on the Devon Ice Cap. The passengers were working on a survey as part of the Polar Continental Shelf Program.

When the aircraftarrived at the glacier, the pilot determined that itssurface definition was unsafe for landing and turned back.

The pilot made a second attempt about 45 minutes later. Approaching the glacier, the pilot reduced the helicopter's speed and used rocks as a visual guide to approach.

The helicopter then collided with the terrain.

A helicopter after it has crashed, with a red circle showing the flat light conditions that day.
A photo taken shortly after the helicopter went down in June 2023. The Transportation Safety Board says the aircraft hit the terrain while flying in flat-light conditions. (Transportation Safety Board of Canada)

"Once the helicopter had passed the rocks being used as visual reference, the pilot lost visual reference to the surface in flat-light conditions," the TSB report says.

The helicopter hit the snow-covered surface and was destroyed. The passengers and pilotreceived minor injuries.

"In these conditions, the pilot can become disoriented without clear references to the surface and may turn or descend into terrain," the report reads.

After the crash, one of the passengers used a satellite phone to call the Polar Continental Shelf Program in Resolute Bay, Nunavut,and the three peoplewere rescued two and a half hours later.

a photo of snow with a hazy sky and a red circle showing flat-light conditions
This photo shows where the aircraft crashed in flat-light conditions, according to the Transportation Safety Board of Canada. (Transportation Safety Board of Canada)

Flat light training

As a result of the incident, staff at Manitoba-based Custom Helicopters Ltd., the company that operated the flight,received training on flying in flat light.It also issued Arctic meteorological trainingfor pilots flying in remote locations.

The TSB report also found that the pilot did not have phone or internet access to check the weather before taking off.

The report does not make any recommendations, but listssafety messages for pilots.

"Flying in flat-light conditions can affect a pilot's ability to detect and correct any changes in the aircraft's attitude, altitude, or airspeed. The degradation of visual cues can result in a loss of situational awareness and possible collision with terrain," the report says.