
An Emirates (EK) Boeing 777-300 carrying 328 passengers, flying from Dubai to Miami, experienced a series of aerial and operational challenges which culminated in a safe landing after a journey exceeding 17 hours.
As the flight approached Miami, it encountered turbulent weather conditions including strong thunderstorms, reduced visibility, and wind shear warnings, prompting the crew to abort the first landing attempt for safety reasons.
Subsequently, preparations were made for a second landing attempt after a relative weather improvement, before the captain declared a minimum fuel state. However, this attempt failed because another aircraft did not vacate the runway in time, necessitating a go-around and repositioning in the airport’s airspace.
With fuel reserves dwindling and consumption accelerating due to the storms, the flight captain declared an emergency via a “Mayday” call. This prompted air traffic control to grant the aircraft full priority and clear the routes, allowing the crew to successfully land the aircraft on the third attempt.
Commenting on the landing, Argentine aviation safety and compliance monitoring expert Claudio D. Caceres stated on his “X” account that the flight crew handled the situation according to international standard procedures, and that they executed the standard emergency call in accordance with Annex 10 of the Convention on International Civil Aviation. D. Caceres added that declaring the call was a correct and necessary step after the fuel level reached a critical stage due to two failed landing attempts and difficult weather conditions in Miami.
He explained that this call compels the control tower to consider the situation a maximum emergency, leading to the clearing of air routes and granting the aircraft immediate landing priority, noting that its use was appropriate instead of a lower-grade call, because the situation had escalated beyond urgency to imminent danger.
Moments of tension were clearly documented, with continued poor weather conditions and increasing operational considerations related to fuel levels. Air traffic control immediately responded to the emergency call by directing other aircraft and re-arranging air traffic flow, while the flight crew maintained complete calm and strict adherence to operational procedures until the safe landing was executed.
