『The Industry That Learned to Fail』のカバーアート

The Industry That Learned to Fail

The Industry That Learned to Fail

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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

In 1968, your odds of dying on a commercial flight were roughly 1 in 350,000. By 2022, that number was 1 in 13.7 million. Aviation didn't get there by building better planes. It got there by building a system that treats every failure as information - and that makes it structurally impossible for a crash to be documented and then forgotten.

This episode traces that system from Tenerife in 1977 - where a flight engineer asked the right question and was overruled in four words by the most senior pilot at KLM - through Portland in 1978, where a first officer watched the fuel run out because the culture taught him to hint rather than assert. It follows Crew Resource Management from its origin to its proof case: United Flight 232 in 1989, where Captain Al Haynes invited a passenger into the cockpit and asked, "Why would I know more than the other three?" 185 people survived an unsurvivable situation.

Then it follows the NTSB - the independent investigation architecture that turned crash data into mandatory public lessons for fifty years, producing the best safety record of any transportation industry in history.

And then it follows the Boeing 737 MAX. 346 people dead. A flight control system erased from the pilot manual before any pilot could object to it. The safety architecture selectively dismantled for a commercial incentive.

The distance between Tenerife and Sioux City is what institutional design can accomplish. The distance between the NTSB's fifty-year record and the 737 MAX is what happens when that design is selectively abandoned.

Show Notes:

The 1 in 350,000 figure (1968–1977) and 1 in 13.7 million figure (2018-2022) are from the MIT/Barnett study and represent global commercial aviation passenger boarding fatality risk. These are the most rigorous publicly available estimates.

The 96% self-certification figure is sourced from the PMC engineering ethics paper citing Kitroeff et al. 2019 (New York Times reporting). Boeing contests aspects of how this figure was framed publicly; the DOT Inspector General report documents the delegation structure without using this precise percentage.

Sources Referenced:

  • MIT News: "Study: Flying Keeps Getting Safer" (2024) - source for the 1-in-13.7-million figure and the decade-doubling safety improvement trend; MIT professor Arnold Barnett
  • Cirium: "Flying Safer Than Ever: The Evolution of Aviation Safety" - source for the one-seventeenth figure and the historical passenger fatality rate context
  • Incident Prevention: "Lessons Learned from the Tenerife Airport Disaster" - source for van Zanten as head of KLM safety and the first officer's objection to the fuel load
  • United Airlines Flight 232 / Haynes quote - from Haynes's widely published public statements and congressional testimony; verify exact wording against primary source
  • NTSB: History of the National Transportation Safety Board - for founding, independence, and 15,500 recommendations figures
  • Congress.gov / CRS Report R44587: "The National Transportation Safety Board: Background and Possible Issues" - for the 82% implementation rate and the 90-day response requirement
  • PMC: "The Boeing 737 MAX: Lessons for Engineering Ethics" (PMC7351545) - for the 96% self-certification figure, the MCAS failure analysis, and the organizational context
  • DOT Inspector General Report AV2021020: "FAA's Certification and Oversight of the 737 MAX" - primary source for the internal-document-only designation and the FAA's incomplete understanding of MCAS at certification
  • Seattle Times: "The Inside Story of MCAS" (Dominic Gates, June 2019) - source for the pressure to avoid simulator training and the removal of MCAS from the flight manual

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