An Atlas Air cargo plane headed for Puerto Rico was diverted Thursday night after taking off from Miami International Airport because of engine trouble, according to an official and flight data.
Flight 5Y095 landed safely after experiencing an “engine malfunction” shortly after departure, Atlas Air said early Friday.
“The crew followed all standard procedures and safely returned” to the airport, the company said in a statement. “At Atlas, safety is always our top priority and we will be conducting a thorough inspection to determine the cause.”
It was unclear what kind of cargo the plane was carrying.
While the company did not state the aircraft type, data collected by FlightAware, a flight tracking company, showed it was a Boeing 747-8.
A spokeswoman for Boeing said early Friday that the company was deferring comment to Atlas Air. The Federal Aviation Administration did not immediately return a request for comment.
The plane left its gate at Miami International at 10:11 p.m. on Thursday and returned to the airport about 50 minutes later, according to FlightAware. The website also showed that the plane traveled 60 miles in total.
Atlas Air, which started in 1992 and whose headquarters are in New York, claims to operate the world’s largest fleet of Boeing 747 freighter aircraft, according to its website. The company also provides customers with a selection of planes, including Boeing 777 and 737 aircraft, for cargo and passenger operations.
The industry’s attention has recently focused on quality control issues at Boeing. Problems began mounting for Boeing in late December when the company urged airlines to inspect all 737 Max airplanes for a possible loose bolt in the rudder-control system after an airline found a bolt was missing a nut during routine maintenance.
The company’s problems escalated in early January after a door panel blew off a 737 Max 9 plane operated by Alaska Airlines, causing an emergency landing in Portland, Ore. The F.A.A. then ordered the temporary grounding of 171 Max 9 planes until they were thoroughly inspected, causing hundreds of flight cancellations and headaches for travelers.
On Wednesday, F.A.A. officials said that an initial round of inspections of 40 Boeing 737 Max 9 planes had been completed, however those aircraft and many others would remain grounded until the agency signed off on the instructions for airlines to inspect the planes.
Amid Boeing’s struggles, Airbus, its longtime rival, has pulled ahead, announcing this month that it had delivered more aircraft and secured more orders than Boeing in 2023.