Aviation expert Mohd Harridon Mohamed Suffian said marine residues could tell scientists where the plane went down.
The Trigana Air Service turboprop plane crashed in a mountainous region in eastern Indonesia Sunday, killing all 54 people on board.
Nearly 4,000 square miles of the Indian Ocean off Réunion Island was scoured but "nothing suspected of having any connection to a plane" was found.
Indonesia's government has struggled to hire and train staff quickly enough to oversee its fast-growing aviation market, which the International Air Transport Association expects to triple in size by 2034.
IndiGo is the largest domestic airline in India in terms of market share, which some estimates expect to have crossed 40 percent for this fiscal year.
A Trigana Air Service turboprop plane was flying from Jayapura to the city of Oksibil when it went down Sunday.
The planes reportedly caught fire after falling to the ground and breaking apart, and the debris was spread over a quarter-mile area.
Last week, Malaysian authorities said that most of the debris previously found in the Maldives was not from the missing plane.
Dozens of people died in several unrelated plane crashes in Indonesia, New Jersey, Virginia and Califronia.
An Indonesian domestic passenger aircraft carrying 54 people lost contact with air traffic control on Sunday in the remote eastern Papua region, the National Search and Rescue Agency said.
The FAA has resolved the computer glitch that caused delays of hundreds of flights in the U.S. Saturday, but the agency is unsure what caused it.
Neither man was identified by name.
A tripartite meeting is expected to focus next month on refining search efforts after the discovery of a flaperon belonging to the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.
Uber has a history of success with previous campaigns to attract public support.
The ride-hailing company enacted two-factor authentication after a surge of complaints earlier this year.
Debris that washed up on the island nation's shores was sent to Malaysia this week for analysis of its origin.
Malaysia Airlines has decided against transporting relatives to the location where debris thought to be linked to a missing plane was found.
Travel demand by an increasingly affluent Chinese population is set to soar long-term, a huge business opportunity for both countries' carriers.
French authorities launched air-and-sea search operations last week around Reunion Island after a wing flap washed up on its shores last month.
Despite increasing customer dissatisfaction, the airline industry is hardly affected, a report shows.
Items such as a package of noodles and a luggage tag were likely not from a Malaysia Airlines jet, but officials were glad people were looking.
Families of those on board the missing plane have yet again raised doubts over Malaysia's handling of the search.
Debris found near an Indian Ocean archipelago was from a barge that capsized Feb. 10, the vessel's captain said.
"There seem to be more than a few items that connect it with Zichron Yaacov, with the glass factory at Tantura, and with the baron’s ships," said University of Haifa researchers Monday.
The focus of the search for the missing plane has now shifted to an area about 2,300 miles west of the ongoing operation in the southern Indian Ocean.
France has dismissed Malaysia’s claims that more debris has been found on Reunion Island.
"Malaysia will always remember and honor those who were lost," the country's prime minister said as he confirmed that debris found last week belonged to the missing plane.
On Wednesday, the Malaysian prime minister confirmed that a wing part from a Boeing 777 aircraft is from Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.
An Australian agency in charge of the search operation said a more recent model's predictions were in line with the discovery of debris on a French island in the Indian Ocean.
Authorities are awaiting a report from France, which is leading the investigation into a flaperon’s possible link to the missing Flight MH370.