New Delhi: More than 11 years after the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 — one of aviation’s most haunting mysteries — authorities have announced a renewed deep-sea search beginning December 30, 2025. The mission is being undertaken by marine-robotics firm Ocean Infinity under a “no-find, no-fee” arrangement, reviving hope for closure for the families of the 239 souls who vanished.
What happened to MH370
MH370, a Boeing 777, departed from Kuala Lumpur on March 8, 2014, bound for Beijing. Roughly 39 minutes into the flight, radar contact was lost.
Military radar data later showed the aircraft had deviated sharply — flying back over northern Malaysia, past Penang, then over the Andaman Sea before turning south toward the remote southern Indian Ocean.
An analysis of satellite “handshake” signals from the plane led investigators to conclude it likely crashed somewhere around 2,500 km (about 1,500 miles) southwest of Australia.
rong>Previous search efforts
The first international search (led by Malaysia, Australia and China) spanned a huge 120,000 sq km swathe of the southern Indian Ocean but found no definitive wreckage.
In 2018, Ocean Infinity conducted a “no-cure, no-fee” expedition itself — scanning 112,000 sq km north of the original zone — and concluded the search with no success.
Over the years, more than 30 pieces of suspected debris washed ashore on distant islands or along Africa’s coastlines. Only three wing fragments have been definitively confirmed as parts of MH370.
A comprehensive 2018 investigative report suggested the plane had been manually diverted after takeoff — but crucially admitted it could not determine who did it, or why.
What’s new in the 2025 search
The upcoming search will scan a more narrowly defined — but carefully analysed — 15,000 sq km “target area” of the southern Indian Ocean, identified as having the highest probability of holding the wreckage.
The agreement remains “no-find, no-fee”: the company will be paid only if it locates substantive wreckage.
The search is scheduled to begin December 30 and run intermittently over a 55-day window — weather and ocean conditions permitting.
Officials have highlighted the mission as part of their commitment to deliver answers — and closure — to the families of those lost.
