Spanair said today it never considered replacing a jet that suffered a technical problem shortly before it crashed on take off last week in Spain, killing 154 people.
The airline made the comments after a government minister said Spanair told airport authorities it was considering replacing the aircraft, then opted to repair it instead.
Spanish radio station La Ser today played a recording of a telephone conversation in which it said a Spanair official asked the airport about the possibility of changing planes.
In a statement, Spanair said it followed procedure and told the airport another aircraft was available for flight JK5022 to Las Palmas in the Canary Islands, should it be required.
"At no time did it indicate its intention to substitute the aircraft that suffered the accident," the airline said.
Spanair presented its version of events as authorities said they had finished identifying all 154 victims of Spain's worst crash in 25 years. The process took so long due to the severity of burns to some bodies.
The Spanair plane was originally due to take off at 1 pm on August 20th. After moving away from the terminal and approaching the runway it returned because of a technical problem.
Spanish development minister Magdalena Alvarez told Congress yesterday that Spanair then informed Madrid's Barajas airport it was considering changing the McDonnell Douglas MD-82 aircraft due to a fault in a temperature gauge.
"Later it told the airport control centre that it was keeping it," Ms Alvarez said.
The airline, owned by Scandinavia's SAS, said its technicians decided not to swap the aircraft as it required only a minor repair that would take no more than 15 minutes.
Aviation experts say the problem in the MD-82's temperature gauge could not have caused the accident.
After 33 minutes on the stand, it set out again and crashed into a ravine at the edge of the runway moments after takeoff.
Only 18 people survived. Fourteen of them remain in hospital, two in very serious condition.
An airport video shows the aircraft swerving off course shortly after take off.
One engine on the plane may have had a fault that slammed it into reverse and caused the plane to veer out of control, Spanish newspapers have reported, quoting investigators.
El Pais quoted sources at Spanair saying mechanics found the fault three days before the crash and made a temporary fix until the problem could be repaired at a later date.
The plane's black boxes have gone for analysis and it is likely to take months to confirm the cause of the crash.
Reuters