logo
Power play: how the Heathrow shutdown hit passengers at home and away

Power play: how the Heathrow shutdown hit passengers at home and away

Independent23-03-2025

Each of the quarter-million passengers whose travel plans were wrecked by the sudden closure of Heathrow airport on Friday simply wanted to reach the destination on their ticket. There was no good way to learn that wasn't going to happen due to a fire in an electricity substation that had cut power to Europe's busiest airport.
For the 30,000 bleary passengers or so aboard overnight flights to west of central London, it was an announcement from the pilot saying the plane was diverting to some corner of a foreign airfield: possibly Reykjavik, maybe Cairo. Even worse, perhaps: that after four hours of flying towards London, a swift U-turn as the aircraft returned to its starting point, whether in Delhi or New York. Back to square one.
Another 100,000 never made it beyond square one. These were the people who were booked on flights from Heathrow. Many had begun their journey to the airport in the small hours of Friday, only to receive the brutal message: 'We're really sorry that your upcoming flight on Friday 21 March 2025 has been cancelled.' Joy and excitement crushed in an instant.
An equal and opposite number of travellers constituted a foreign legion, scattered across airports around the world. Some were returning home from holidays or busiest trips; others were overseas visitors to the UK. Perhaps a few were happy; had I been a British Airways passenger from Singapore, and rebooked three days later, I might have enjoyed the airline's obligation to provide a hotel room and meals for an extended stay. But the vast majority were somewhere on the spectrum from disappointment to distress.
Beyond the personal stories of upset, the airlines are seething. The collective financial hit from lost revenue, care costs and the expense of retrieving aircraft from the many and various locations where they landed in a hurry on Friday morning is, I estimate conservatively, £100m. More than half of that loss will be sustained by British Airways. Longer term, BA will take a reputational hit even though the latest meltdown was way beyond its control.
For British Airways, transfer passengers comprise an essential part of the business mix. Heathrow airport is in competition against the key continental hubs: Amsterdam, Paris CDG and Frankfurt… where champagne corks were popping on Friday night after another Great British meltdown. If the UK's flagship airport gets (more of) a reputation for chaos, then travellers who have a choice of how to get from Athens to Atlanta will choose another route.
You can tell things are going really badly when BA suspends its 'middle-seat empty' policy in Club Europe to free up more seats for stranded passengers. The last time it happened? When recovering the Nats air-traffic control computer failure over the August bank holiday in 2023.
Once again, the UK looks a bit of a laughing stock. Any more of this and I will start a line of travel chaos T-shirts: choose between 'Stranded in Shannon, 21 March 2025' and '24 hours in Gatwick, August 2023'. There is no slack in the system, and once again the passenger pays the price.
Simon Calder, also known as The Man Who Pays His Way, has been writing about travel for The Independent since 1994. In his weekly opinion column, he explores a key travel issue – and what it means for you.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

European shares drop amid caution after Israel's attacks on Iran
European shares drop amid caution after Israel's attacks on Iran

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

European shares drop amid caution after Israel's attacks on Iran

June 13 (Reuters) - European shares opened sharply lower on Friday after Israel's attack on Iran dented global risk sentiment and sent investors flocking to safe haven assets. The pan-European STOXX 600 (.STOXX), opens new tab was down 1.2% at 543.54 points as of 0707 GMT. The benchmark is on track to log a fifth session in the red, setting it up for a weekly decline. Israel launched strikes against Iran on Friday, hitting nuclear facilities and ballistic missile factories, to prevent Tehran from building an atomic weapon. Iran retaliated by launching 100 drones. The tensions add to caution in global financial markets as they grapple with the impact of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff policy. The heightened tensions in the oil-rich Middle East sent prices of the commodity soaring, last up over 7%, weighing most heavily on airlines. The travel and leisure sector (.SXTP), opens new tab was down 3.1%. British Airways owner ICAG (ICAG.L), opens new tab tumbled 4.8%, Lufthansa ( opens new tab down 4.6% and EasyJet (EZJ.L), opens new tab dropped 4.3%. Cruise operator Carnival's (CCL.L), opens new tab London-listed shares slipped 5%. On the flip side, energy stocks (.SXEP), opens new tab soared, with Shell (SHEL.L), opens new tab and BP (BP.L), opens new tab up 1.9% each. Shares of defence companies were also higher, with France's Dassault Aviation ( opens new tab up 1.3% and Italy's Leonardo ( opens new tab up 2.3%.

Dreamliner planes had clean safety record until Ahmedabad crash
Dreamliner planes had clean safety record until Ahmedabad crash

North Wales Chronicle

time19 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Dreamliner planes had clean safety record until Ahmedabad crash

The aircraft type, which entered service in 2011, is described by the US manufacturer as 'the bestselling passenger widebody of all time' with more than 2,000 orders from 89 customers. The planes have carried more than one billion passengers on nearly five million flights. Air India has 34 of the aircraft in its fleet, according to aviation analysts Cirium. The jet is flown by a number of other airlines serving the UK, such as British Airways, Virgin Atlantic and Tui Airways. It increases fuel efficiency by up to 25% compared with the planes it replaces, largely because of modern engines, using lightweight materials and improved aerodynamics. Recent concerns over the safety of Boeing aircraft have generally related to its 737 Max aircraft. A Boeing 787 Dreamliner operated by Ethiopian Airlines caught fire while parked at Heathrow airport with no passengers onboard in 2013. An investigation found the fire was probably caused by a short circuit. India is one of the world's fastest growing markets for passenger flights. The country has witnessed a number of deadly crashes. Pilot error was blamed for a crash involving an Air India Express plane carrying 190 people in the southern state of Kerala in August 2020. Twenty-one people were killed. In May 2010, some 158 people died when an Air India plane flying from Dubai overshot the runway and crashed into a gorge while attempting to land in the southern city of Mangaluru.

Dreamliner planes had clean safety record until Ahmedabad crash
Dreamliner planes had clean safety record until Ahmedabad crash

Rhyl Journal

time19 hours ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Dreamliner planes had clean safety record until Ahmedabad crash

The aircraft type, which entered service in 2011, is described by the US manufacturer as 'the bestselling passenger widebody of all time' with more than 2,000 orders from 89 customers. The planes have carried more than one billion passengers on nearly five million flights. Air India has 34 of the aircraft in its fleet, according to aviation analysts Cirium. The jet is flown by a number of other airlines serving the UK, such as British Airways, Virgin Atlantic and Tui Airways. It increases fuel efficiency by up to 25% compared with the planes it replaces, largely because of modern engines, using lightweight materials and improved aerodynamics. Recent concerns over the safety of Boeing aircraft have generally related to its 737 Max aircraft. A Boeing 787 Dreamliner operated by Ethiopian Airlines caught fire while parked at Heathrow airport with no passengers onboard in 2013. An investigation found the fire was probably caused by a short circuit. India is one of the world's fastest growing markets for passenger flights. The country has witnessed a number of deadly crashes. Pilot error was blamed for a crash involving an Air India Express plane carrying 190 people in the southern state of Kerala in August 2020. Twenty-one people were killed. In May 2010, some 158 people died when an Air India plane flying from Dubai overshot the runway and crashed into a gorge while attempting to land in the southern city of Mangaluru.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store