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Heathrow flights resume after closure causes global flight turmoil [Update@ Post#9]

Rajdeep

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Surprised there is no thread on this but Heathrow airport is closed today due to power outage after fire in a substation in Hayes. More than 1397 flights have been diverted or cancelled. The cause of fire is yet to be determined but there are speculations that Russia can be behind this.

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FIRE OF WAR?

Fears PUTIN may be behind Heathrow fire as chorus of experts warn blaze ‘bears all hallmarks’ of a Russian sabotage plot​


FEARS are growing that Russia could be behind the devastating fire that brought Britain's busiest airport to a standstill for 24 hours.

A chorus of experts have warned the inferno that ground Heathrow Airport to a halt has "all the hallmarks" of Russian sabotage.

One theory is that the cause of the blaze is an old and faulty transformer that broke and caught fire.

But the blaze also follows a chilling wave of Russian intelligence-linked fires, bomb plots, and even assassination attempts across Europe - and has delighted Russian trolls.

Ex-military officials and security experts have previously warned a single substation fire crippling an airport could suggest a state-sponsored attack.

Counter terrorism-police are combing the wreckage for marks of foul-play - but so far no evidence has emerged.

 
I was driving to work this morning and was surprised to see signs on the motorway stating Heathrow Closed. I couldn’t understand what was going on. As far as I know, Heathrow Airport has only been closed twice before—once on 9/11 and again during the 2010 volcanic eruption.
 
I was driving to work this morning and was surprised to see signs on the motorway stating Heathrow Closed. I couldn’t understand what was going on. As far as I know, Heathrow Airport has only been closed twice before—once on 9/11 and again during the 2010 volcanic eruption.
Dont source Tabloids bhai. Heathrow will be fully operational in a few hours.
Its standard lazy govt systems failing without proper back ups. You dont need enemies when people are lazy.
 
I was driving to work this morning and was surprised to see signs on the motorway stating Heathrow Closed. I couldn’t understand what was going on. As far as I know, Heathrow Airport has only been closed twice before—once on 9/11 and again during the 2010 volcanic eruption.
Infrastructure in this country is crumbling. It doesn't need Putin to cause chaos.
 
Heathrow flights resume after closure causes global flight turmoil

Flights at Britain's Heathrow resumed late on Friday after a fire knocked out its power supply and shut Europe's busiest airport for the day, stranding tens of thousands of passengers and causing travel turmoil worldwide.

Heathrow said its teams worked tirelessly to reopen the world's fifth-busiest airport after it was forced to close entirely after a huge fire engulfed a nearby substation on Thursday night, with travellers told to stay away.

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The airport had been due to handle 1,351 flights on Friday, flying up to 291,000 passengers, but planes were diverted to other airports in Britain and across Europe, while many long-haul flights returned to their point of departure.

Heathrow said there would be a limited number of flights on Friday, mostly focused on relocating aircraft and bringing planes into London.

"Tomorrow morning, we expect to be back in full operation, to 100% operation as a normal day," said Heathrow chief executive Thomas Woldbye. "What I'd like to do is to apologise to the many people who have had their travel affected ... we are very sorry about all the inconvenience."

Police said that after an initial assessment they were not treating the incident as suspicious, although enquiries remained ongoing. London Fire Brigade said its investigations would focus on the electrical distribution equipment.

The closure not only caused misery for travellers but provoked anger from airlines, which questioned how such crucial infrastructure could fail.

The industry is now facing the prospect of a financial hit costing tens of millions of pounds, and a likely fight over who should pay.

"You would think they would have significant back-up power," one top executive from a European airline told Reuters.

Heathrow's Woldbye said back-up systems and procedures had worked as they should.

"This (power supply) is a bit of a weak point," he told reporters outside the airport. "But of course contingencies of certain sizes we cannot guard ourselves against 100% and this is one of them."

Asked who would pay, he said there were "procedures in place", adding "we don't have liabilities in place for incidents like this".

British transport minister Heidi Alexander said the incident had been out of Heathrow's control.

"They have stood up their resilience plans very swiftly and have been working in close collaboration with all the emergency responders and the airline operators," she told reporters.

DIVERTED

Airlines including JetBlue, American Airlines, Air Canada, Air India, Delta Air Lines, Qantas, United Airlines, IAG-owned British Airways and Virgin were diverted or returned to their origin airports in the middle of the night, according to data from flight analytics firm Cirium.

Shares in many airlines, including U.S. carriers, fell.

Aviation experts said the last time European airports experienced disruption on such a large scale was the 2010 Icelandic volcanic ash cloud that grounded some 100,000 flights.

While flights are restarting, it will be some time before all scheduled passenger services return to normal.

"We have flight and cabin crew colleagues and planes that are currently at locations where we weren’t planning on them to be," said Sean Doyle, chief executive of British Airways, the biggest carrier at Heathrow which had 341 flights scheduled to land there on Friday.

"Unfortunately, it will have a huge impact on all of our customers flying with us over the coming days."

Britain's Department for Transport said it had temporarily lifted restrictions on overnight flights to ease congestion.

Passengers stranded in London and facing the prospect of days of disruptions were scrambling to make alternate travel arrangements.

"It's pretty stressful," Robyn Autry, 39, a professor, who had been due to fly home to New York. "I'm worried about how much is it going to cost me to fix this."

Prices at hotels around Heathrow jumped, with booking sites offering rooms for 500 pounds ($645), roughly five times the normal price levels.

A WAKE-UP CALL

Airline executives, electrical engineers and passengers questioned how Britain's gateway to the world could be forced to close by one fire, however large.

Heathrow and London's other major airports have been hit by other outages in recent years, most recently by an automated gate failure and an air traffic system meltdown, both in 2023.

Philip Ingram, a former intelligence officer in the British military, said Heathrow's inability to keep operating exposed vulnerability in Britain's critical national infrastructure.

"It is a wake-up call," he told Reuters. "There is no way that Heathrow should be taken out completely because of a failure in one power substation."

Willie Walsh, the head of the global airlines body IATA and a former head of British Airways, said Heathrow had once again let passengers down.

Heathrow said it had diesel generators and uninterruptible power supplies in place to land aircraft and evacuate passengers safely. Those systems all operated as expected. But with the airport consuming as much energy as a small city, it said it could not run all its operations safely on back-up systems.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer's spokesperson said there were questions to answer about how the incident occurred and there would be a thorough investigation.

REUTERS
 
Heathrow warned by airlines about power supply days before shutdown

Heathrow Airport was warned about the "resilience" of its power supply in the days before a fire which shut down the airport for over a day last month.

Nigel Wicking, chief executive of the Heathrow Airline Operators' Committee, told a group of MPs on Wednesday that he spoke to the Team Heathrow director on 15 March about his concerns.

Chief executive Thomas Woldbye apologised to the nearly 300,000 passengers whose journeys were disrupted by the closure on 21 March, which was caused by a fire at a nearby electrical substation.

He offered his "deepest regrets" adding that the "situation was unprecedented".

He added that he recognised "the considerable inconvenience and concern it caused".

Speaking to MPs on the transport committee, Mr Wicking said he expressed his concerns "following a couple of incidents of, unfortunately, theft of wire and cable around some of the power supply that, on one of those occasions, took out the lights on the runway for a period of time".

Runway lights are critical to the safety of passengers.

"That obviously made me concerned, and as such I'd raised the point. I wanted to understand better the overall resilience of the airport."

Mr Wicking added: "It is the most expensive airport in the world, with regard passenger charges, so from our perspective, that means we should actually have the best service, we should have the best infrastructure."

He said he had spoken to the Team Heathrow director on 15 March about his concerns - six days before the fire - and the chief operating officer and chief customer officer on 19 March.

On the day of the shutdown, airlines had to divert 120 aircraft, which is "not a light decision to be made in any context", he added.

As a consequence, when Mr Wicking joined a call with NATs, the national air traffic service, at 05:30, "they'd run out of space within the UK for aircraft to divert".

"Aircraft were then going to Europe, and then some were even halfway across Europe and going back to base in India," he said. "So, quite a level of disruption for those passengers, let alone all of the cancellations".

'Losing power'

Mr Woldbye said Heathrow realised "during the early hours" of Friday 21 March that "we were losing power to the airport".

"In our operations centre you would seen all the red lights go, that the systems were powering down," he said. "We had no information as to why."

"We then had a slightly later stage call from the fire department that the substation was on fire," he said.

Heathrow is supplied by three substations, but knocking out one caused loss of power to the airport.

Mr Woldbye said a third of the airport was powering down and that Terminal 2 was particularly affected, along with certain central systems. He added that it became "first and foremost a safety situation".

"We need to make sure, when a crisis happens, that people are safe," he said.

Safety critical systems such as runway, runway lighting and the control tower "switched in as they should", however, he said.

BBC
 
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