EASA emergency airworthiness directive for A319/320/321 fleet 28Nov 2025. Immediate Grounding for many

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EASA has issued an EAD on 28 November 2025 for the global fleet of A319/320/321 after an uncommanded pitch down in a JetBlue A320 on 30 October 2520

This will affect operators such as JQ.

Here is the Airbus statement.

Effectively all affected aircraft are immediately grounded, though some airlines started to make the fix before the EASA EAD

Avherald report on the Incident

EAD:

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The AFR reports , on-line:

Airbus cautioned that more than half of its active A320 jetliner family fleet will need a software fix after a recent incident involving a JetBlue Airways airliner revealed that “intense solar radiation” could corrupt data that helps maintain functioning flight controls.

Airbus:
 
Guessing this will affect QF (network) out of PER too, they have close to 30 A319/20s now
 
Network aviation does not appear to have commented though QF has said none of its fleet are affected

The number of aircraft globally affected are approximately 6000 - 50% of the global fleet?

The fix shouldn't take long though if the the software can be rolled back on the affected computer. I assume a flight test is also required?
 
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From the BBC

Australian airline Jetstar says some of its flights are unable to departpublished at 09:07
09:07​


We've just seen an update from low-cost Australian airline Jetstar, which says some of its Airbus-operated flights are unable to depart at the moment.

"We’re working through the impacts on our fleet and to our customers. We'll have more information shortly," it says.

There is no impact to airline giant Qantas at this stage.

For context: Jetstar is Qantas's low-cost airline.
 
While the first flight of the the day SYD-MEL got away, the next four have been cancelled. That’s around 800-900 displaced pax just there :(
 

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