Surging Jet-Stream Winds Hinder U.S.-Bound Flights From
Europe
Winter weather is putting a kink in air travel plans
as the North Atlantic jet stream hits peak intensity.
Stronger westerly
headwinds for U.S.-bound flights are stretching out travel times, forcing some
planes to stop for refueling. Trips such as London to New York, a busy business
route, are running almost eight hours -- 45 minutes longer than voyages in
September.
Two Philadelphia-bound American Airlines flights, one from
Brussels and the other from Amsterdam, had to touch down on Jan. 11 to refuel in
Bangor, Maine, said Scott Ramsay, the carrier's managing director of its
integrated operations center. The journey from Brussels took 9 hours and 16
minutes, about an hour more than three months earlier, according to industry
data tracker FlightAware.
"You know you're going to be in trouble on the
way back," Ramsay said. "You try to pick out ways that you can get around the
headwind."
If you're headed in the opposite direction, you might catch
one of the shortest flights on that route yet. A British Airways flight from New
York to London earlier this week approached the speed of sound, buoyed by the
jet stream, and the Boeing Co. 777-200 made the journey in just over 5 hours,
according to FlightAware.
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