Aerolíneas Argentinas was established by the Argentine government in . Shortly after the carrier started revenue flights in it experienced its first deadly accident, when a Douglas C-47A crashed en route to Buenos Aires from Mar del Plata, killing 17 of the 18 occupants.
Following is a list of accidents and incidents experienced by Aerolíneas Argentinas. According to the Aviation Safety Network, there have been 12 deadly accidents, totalling 335 fatalities.[1] The deadliest accident occurred in 1961, with a death toll of 67. The latest accident involving fatalities took place in 1970. The company ranks among the safest airlines in the world.
Aerolíneas Argentinas has written off 28 aircraft; nine Douglas C-47As, four Avro 748s, three Comet 4s, two Boeing 737s, two Douglas DC-6s, two Convair CV-240s, two Fokker F-28s, one Boeing 707, one Douglas DC-4, one Douglas C-54, and one McDonnell Douglas MD-88.
Date | Location | Aircraft | Tail number | Aircraft damage | Fatalities | Description | Refs | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Buenos Aires | LV-ACL | W/O | Overturned on landing at Ezeiza Airport. | |||||
Douglas C-47A | LV-ACH | W/O | /18 | Crashed while en route a domestic scheduled Mar del Plata–Buenos Aires passenger service. | ||||
Río Grande | Douglas C-47A | LV-ACY | W/O | The aircraft had just departed from Río Grande Airport bound for Buenos Aires when it crashed. Eleven of twenty occupants aboard perished in the accident, plus 2 people on the ground. | ||||
Puerto Deseado | Douglas C-47A | LV-AGE | W/O | Overran the runway and came to rest into a ditch at Puerto Deseado Airport. | ||||
LV-ADG | Repaired | Overshoot the runway on landing at Puerto Deseado Airport and hit a military truck, killing two occupants and injuring other two. Everybody aboard the aircraft survived. | ||||||
Córdoba | Douglas C-54A | LV-ABQ | W/O | /41 | Crash-landed north of Córdoba while on approach to Pajas Blancas Airport, inbound from Salta on a domestic scheduled passenger service. | |||
Douglas C-47A | LV-ACX | W/O | /25 | The airplane was due to operate a domestic scheduled Córdoba–Mendoza route when crashed into mountainous terrain, within the La Rioja territory. After a diversion to La Rioja due to severe turbulence on the original flight path. | ||||
Capilla del Señor | CV-240 | LV-ADQ | W/O | /32 | The aircraft was operating a scheduled Buenos Aires-Córdoba passenger service; bad weather forced it to land south-southwest of Capilla del Señor. | |||
Río Gallegos | Douglas C-47A | LV-ACQ | W/O | /5 | A fire broke out when the aircraft failed to get airborne during take-off at Río Chico Airport. The aircraft was operating a cargo service. | |||
Pavín | Douglas C-47A | LV-ACD | W/O | /18 | Crashed north-east of Pavín, Córdoba Province, as it descended below the minimum prescribed altitude on approach to Río Cuarto Airport inbound from Buenos Aires. | |||
Buenos Aires | Viking | Crashed. | [2] | |||||
DC-4 | LV-AHZ | W/O | /61 | Flight 670 was bound for San Carlos de Bariloche Airport from Ministro Pistarini International Airport when it crashed en route southeast of Bolívar, under extreme weather conditions. | ||||
Ilha Grande | DC-6 | LV-ADV | W/O | /22 | Force-landed on a beach after the failure of two engines. The aircraft was operating a scheduled international Rio de Janeiro–Buenos Aires passenger service. | |||
Mar del Plata | Douglas C-47A | LV-AFW | W/O | /18 | The aircraft was due to operate the second leg of a domestic scheduled Ministro Pistarini International Airport–Mar del Plata Airport–Comandante Espora Airport passenger service as Flight 672, when it crashed into the sea, off the coast, shortly after takeoff. | |||
Santiago del Estero | Douglas C-47A | LV-ACM | W/O | /10 | Belly landing. | |||
Asunción | Comet 4 | LV-AHP | W/O | /50 | Crashed away from Silvio Pettirossi International Airport, on final approach. A crew member and a passenger died. | |||
Mendoza | CV-240 | LV-ADM | W/O | /32 | A loss of hydraulic pressure prompted the flightcrew to return to El Plumerillo Airport. On its way back to the airport, the aircraft force-landed in a vineyard near Mendoza. | |||
Buenos Aires | Comet 4 | LV-AHO | W/O | /6 | Hard landing at Ezeiza Airport during a training flight. | |||
DC-6 | LV-ADS | W/O | /31 | The aircraft was operating a scheduled Asunción–Buenos Aires service as Flight 205 when it suddenly crashed in a field, east-northeast of Salto. | [3] [4] | |||
Pardo | DC-6 | LV-ADW | W/O | /67 | Broke up and crashed west of Pardo, Buenos Aires, because of severe turbulence encountered during climbout. Due to operate a scheduled Buenos Aires–Comodoro Rivadavia domestic passenger service as Flight 644. The accident remains the deadliest one in the carrier's history. | [5] | ||
Campinas | Comet 4 | LV-AHR | W/O | /52 | Collided with eucalyptus trees during initial climbout just after it departed from Viracopos-Campinas International Airport, and crashed. The aircraft was operating an international scheduled Buenos Aires–Campinas–Port of Spain–New York City passenger service as Flight 322. | |||
Stanley | DC-4 | LV-AGG | Repaired | /50 | Bound for Río Gallegos from Buenos Aires, Flight 648 was hijacked by 19 extremists that intended to carry out a symbolical invasion to the Falkland Islands. Peronist militants masterminded the hijacking under the name "Operativo Cóndor" (English: Operation Condor). The aircraft was diverted and forced to land at the Stanley racecourse. Members of the Royal Marines as well as civilians were taken as hostages. The hijackers surrendered to a priest the next day, were sent back to Argentina, and imprisoned. | |||
Bahía Blanca | HS-748 Srs. 1 | LV-IEV | W/O | /39 | Touched down off the runway in bad visibility at Comandante Espora Airport. | [6] | ||
HS-748 Srs. 1 | LV-HHI | W/O | /28 | Ended up in a paddock when it landed short of the runway threshold at Santa Rosa Airport. | [7] | |||
Loma Alta | HS-748 Srs. 1 | LV-HGW | W/O | /37 | The aircraft was operating a scheduled Asunción–Formosa–Corrientes–Rosario–Buenos Aires-Aeroparque passenger service as Flight 707 when it crashed into the ground near Loma Alta, Chaco, while on its third leg, after the pilots lost control of the aircraft during severe turbulence due to a thunderstorm. | [8] | ||
HS-748 Srs. 1 | LV-HHH | W/O | ||||||
Concordia | F28-1000 | LV-LOB | W/O | /60 | Hit trees on approach to Concordia Airport inbound from Buenos Aires, short of the runway. The crew managed to land the aircraft safely, but the nose gear and the fuselage resulted damaged beyond economical repair. | [9] [10] | ||
Buenos Aires | Boeing 707-320C | LV-JGR | W/O | /5 | Overran the runway on landing in poor weather at Ezeiza Airport. The aircraft was completing a São Paulo–Buenos Aires freighter service. | [11] | ||
Ushuaia | Boeing 737-200 | LV-LIU | W/O | /62 | Flight 648 was a domestic scheduled Buenos Aires–Bahía Blanca–Río Grande–Ushuaia passenger service that landed at the final destination airport with excessive speed, veered off the runway, slid down a slope for, and came into rest in shallow waters. | [12] | ||
Villa Gesell | F28-4000 | LV-MZD | W/O | /90 | Destroyed by fire following a runway overrun after an over fast touchdown. The aircraft was completing a scheduled Buenos Aires to Villa Gesell passenger service. | [13] | ||
Los Angeles | Boeing 747-200B | None | /356 | Shrimp contaminated with cholera was distributed on Flight 386, which was bound to Los Angeles from Buenos Aires via Lima. One of the passengers died from the illness. | ||||
LV-JNE | W/O | /113 | Overran the runway when it aborted takeoff following the burst of a tyre at the San Luis Airport, catching fire. Due to operate a scheduled San Luis–Buenos Aires passenger service as Flight 8524. | |||||
Buenos Aires | MD-88 | LV-VBY | W/O | Destroyed by hangar fire at Aeroparque Jorge Newbery. |