Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

The world’s longest non-stop flight is coming

NEW YORK — Pretty much everyone prefers a non-stop flight — business people, especially. And they are more likely than most to be in a position to afford the premium. But right now, all the money in the world won’t get you from Sydney to the Big Apple or UK without a pit stop, because commercial planes just don’t have that kind of range.

Qantas Airways hopes to be able to make the nonstop trip to London — 20 hours and 20 minutes — from Sydney by 2020. Photo: REUTERS

Qantas Airways hopes to be able to make the nonstop trip to London — 20 hours and 20 minutes — from Sydney by 2020. Photo: REUTERS

NEW YORK — Pretty much everyone prefers a non-stop flight — business people, especially. And they are more likely than most to be in a position to afford the premium. But right now, all the money in the world won’t get you from Sydney to the Big Apple or UK without a pit stop, because commercial planes just don’t have that kind of range.

That may soon change. For many years, executives at Australian carrier Qantas Airways Ltd. have coveted a non-stop offering from Sydney and Melbourne to London. Now, as technology has matured, Qantas executives finally see the potential to realise that dream. Two new models planned by Airbus SE and Boeing Co., they hope, will be able to make the non-stop trip to London — 20 hours and 20 minutes — from Sydney. This new model would also jet across the Pacific Ocean to New York in about 18 hours. 

On Friday, Qantas Chief Executive Officer Alan Joyce issued a public “challenge” to the companies to extend the range of Boeing’s new 777X, which is slated for 2020, and the planned "Ultra-Long Range" version of Airbus’s A350, which rolls out next year. Qantas hopes to take delivery of such a plane and begin its Sydney to London service in 2022, the company said as part of its full-year income results. 

Qantas noted that both planes “can get close” to the requirements needed for London and New York missions. The public prodding is designed to make one or both manufacturers revisit technical schemes to edge out even greater range.

A non-stop flight from Sydney to London would shave almost four hours off current travel times that involve a stopover; for New York, travelers could save nearly three hours. Airbus and Boeing didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

Long-range flights have become far more common in recent years, as lighter composite aircraft, combined with more durable and fuel-efficient jet turbine technology, have opened a range of new routes with long-haul models from Airbus and Boeing. “You know from what they have done on other aircraft that Sydney-London and Melbourne-London has real possibility," Mr Joyce told the Sydney Morning Herald in April.

Earlier this year, Qantas said it would commence non-stop flights to London from Perth in March 2018, using a Boeing 787-9.

Singapore, for example, plans to use the Airbus A350-900ULR next year to restore its non-stop flights to Los Angeles and New York, five years after it quit the flights due to fuel costs. United Continental Holdings Inc. flies non-stop from San Francisco to Singapore daily, while Qantas flies from Dallas to Sydney non-stop. Both flights can top 16 hours.

Qantas flew its first so-called "Kangaroo Route" from Sydney to London in December 1947, flying a Lockheed Constellation. The trip took four days. In a few years, the kangaroo-flagged carrier hopes to do it in just over 20 hours. BLOOMBERG

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.