A British Airways plane with 137 people on board thought to have been struck by an object as it approached Heathrow airport here was probably not hit by a drone as first thought, the government said today.
Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin told MPs it was now thought what happened "was not a drone incident".
Air accident investigators said they had not ruled out a drone but had no evidence to support the suggestion.
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The Metropolitan Police had said the plane was flying at about 1,700ft over the area of Richmond Park, in south west London, at the time of the incident.
The Airbus A320 was carrying 132 passengers and five crew as it approached the airport. It landed safely.
The incident had been thought to be the first drone collision with an aircraft in the UK.
The UK Air Proximity Board - which investigates near-miss incidents in UK airspace - says there had been a number of serious near-misses at UK airports involving drones.
The latest statistics from the board showed there was another drone near miss on February 14 with an Airbus A320 that was flying out of Heathrow at 12,500ft.
The crew reported missing the 6ft wide black drone, which had a flashing red light, by 20ft.
The pilot assessed the risk of collision as "high". The drone operator could not be traced.
The head of the International Air Transport Association, Tony Tyler, earlier this year warned that drones flown by the general public were "a real and growing threat" to civilian aircraft.