German air controllers urge remote control of planes after crash
Voice recording and flight data indicate Germanwings pilot Andreas Lubitz locked his captain out of the cockpit and deliberately steered the Airbus A320 into a mountainside on March 24, killing all 150 passengers and crew on board.
"We have to think past today's technology," Klaus Dieter Scheurle, head of the Deutsche Flugsicherung air traffic control authority, said at a press conference on Wednesday.
Such a system could be used in an emergency to take command of the plane and steer it safely to the ground, he said.
"I wouldn't say it's the simplest solution though," he said, adding any such technology was likely to come only in the next decade.
(Reporting by Alexander Huebner; Writing by Victoria Bryan; Editing by Noah Barkin)