By Daniel Stacey 

Australian authorities said a new search area for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 will be decided by the end of June, giving private contractors seeking a role in the rebooted operation little time to adjust bids before an official tender closes.

Australia's Joint Agency Coordination Centre said new analysis of ping transmissions between the missing plane and an Inmarsat PLC satellite had made it clear that "the search zone will move." Although authorities are yet to fix on a precise spot, any new location will remain in the southern Indian Ocean along an arc based on the Boeing Co. 777 jet's final ping transmission on March 8.

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier that the search area may move hundreds of miles southwest after analysts looking at the Inmarsat ping signals decided the plane may have traveled faster than previously thought and turned south later.

The shift in the search area would be the latest blow for families of the 239 passengers and crew on board Flight 370, still waiting for answers about the fate of the plane some 100 days after it went missing. Extensive air and sea searches have turned up only garbage, while an initial underwater search failed to find any trace of the jetliner.

The lack of a fixed search area poses questions about the usefulness of expensive deep-sea survey vessels deployed in the remote Indian Ocean. A Chinese navy ship, Zhu Kezhen, has surveyed 4,088 square kilometers (1,578 square miles) of the seabed in recent weeks, hoping to lay the groundwork for more detailed searches with undersea sonar devices. It is unclear if those ocean floor maps would be useful if the search area moves.

The Fugro Equator, a commercial survey vessel owned by Dutch company Fugro NV, also began mapping the seabed this week. A Fugro representative in Perth, Western Australia, said earlier its vessels cost between 75,000 Australian dollars (US$70,000) and A$160,000 a day to rent.

JACC didn't return a request for comment on the location of the two survey vessels.

Survey costs will be met from the A$60 million set aside by Australia and its partners to look for the missing plane. That means any cost overruns will eat into remaining capital to scour the seabed with deep-sea sonar equipment, or recover debris with remotely operated vehicles.

Part of the delay in deciding the final search area relates to the arduous analysis being carried out by officials of "burst frequency offset" data collected by Inmarsat.

A person close the investigation previously told The Wall Street Journal that this data set--comprising the frequency of seven ping signals picked up by Inmarsat's satellite while Flight 370 was in the air--is being tested to see how it matches a wide range of aircraft speeds, aircraft directions and fuel-consumption numbers.

Doppler analysis allows officials to determine possible air speeds and bearings for the plane at each ping, but not a definitive speed or bearing. Different combinations are run through all seven pings to see how they match up, and tested against aircraft performance models that can show how long the plane could keep flying at different speeds given its known fuel load.

But the process is lengthy and iterative, producing only areas of high and low probability for where the plane may have crashed, rather than firm answers.

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