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The Airbus A320 and Germanwings have great safety records

Mar 25, 2015, 23:26 IST

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An Airbus A320-211 operated by Germanwings - a low cost subsidiary of Germany's Lufthansa - crashed in the French Alps on Tuesday.

Germanwings flight 9525 was flying from Barcelona, Spain to Dusseldorf, Germany when the aircraft experienced a sudden loss of altitude.

All 150 passengers and crew on boards are believed to have perished. Reuters reported that there were three Americans on the flight.

While both "black boxes" have been found, it could be months or years before we know what caused the Airbus to go down.

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"Everyone wants to come up with some sort of possible cause, and there's no way to do that. It could be one of a thousand things." airline pilot and author of the book "Cockpit Confidential" Patrick Smith told Business Insider.

Here's what we do know. The Airbus A320 is one of the most advanced, popular, and durable airliners in the world. With more than 11,500 sold and 6,200 planes in services, the A320 series is arguably Airbus' greatest success. With just 23 fatal incidents in a quarter century of flying, the 320 has an excellent service history.

This was Germanwings first fatal accident since the airline's founding in 1997. Parent company Lufthansa hasn't had a fatal crash in more than two decades.

"Lufthansa and Germanwings both have great safety records," aviation expert and founder of NYCAviation Phil Derner Jr said. "They've taken great steps to maintain a high level of safety."

In fact, the European aviation system ranks as one of the most congested, and yet safest, in the world. With more than 30,000 flights per day covering 21 million nautical miles, accidents remain exceedingly rare.

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None of this means that safety or a problem with the plane won't be identified as a factor in the crash. But both Airbus and the European airline industry have made tremendous strides over the past few decades to make accidents a rare occurrence.

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