Taipei, Nov. 30 (CNA) All Taiwanese airlines completed the required software restoration on Airbus A320-series aircraft before 7 a.m. Sunday, following an emergency directive issued after a technical failure in the United States, Taiwan's Civil Aviation Administration (CAA) said.
Airbus announced on Friday that around 6,000 A320-family jets worldwide must undergo software updates and may not be operated without the fix. The announcement followed reports of a flight-control system malfunction linked to solar flare interference.
According to the CAA, it received the European Union Aviation Safety Agency's (EASA) emergency airworthiness directive on Saturday and immediately instructed local airlines to carry out inspections and the necessary software updates before the order took effect at 8 a.m. Sunday.
The CAA said all in-service A320-family aircraft operated by Taiwanese carriers had completed the required updates before the deadline.
Only Tigerair Taiwan reported minor delays due to the adjustments, while all other airlines operated normally.
-
Business
Taiwan shares close down 0.30%
03/26/2026 01:58 PM -
Culture
Taiwan to send Mandarin teachers to Tibetan schools in India
03/26/2026 12:59 PM -
Society
Magnitude 4.7 earthquake shakes off southeastern Taiwan
03/26/2026 12:48 PM -
Business
SK Hynix, 3 other tech giants to take stakes in Nanya Technology
03/26/2026 12:00 PM -
Politics
Mayor aims to make New Taipei more cosmopolitan after Australia visit
03/26/2026 11:38 AM