World's Longest Flight to Be Even Less
Comfortable Than Expected
Flights half way around the globe are set to be even less
comfortable than expected -- that's if the marathon 20-hour non-stop services
from Sydney to London get off the ground at all.
Qantas Airways Ltd. has ditched the notion of rolling out bunks,
beds, a gym or even a creche for passengers enduring the world's longest
commercial flight. Instead, they'll be given a space to have a stretch and a
drink of water, Qantas Chief Executive Officer Alan Joyce said Monday in Seoul.
The more spartan comfort levels underscore Qantas's challenge as
it tries to break through what it calls aviation's last frontier. There are
other barriers, too: While Joyce said the planes proposed by Boeing Co. and
Airbus SE for the ultra long-haul flights can make the distance, neither can
carry the weight that Qantas initially targeted.
Speaking to reporters in Seoul at the annual gathering of airline
bosses, Joyce said he still needs Qantas pilots to agree to the longer working
hours the ultra-long flights will entail.
"There are a significant number of hurdles to overcome but we
think we can make this work," he said. "There's still not full
payload on each aircraft, but there's enough we think to make it commercially
viable if the other parts of the business case get there."
Deadline Looms
Qantas expects to receive final aircraft proposals from Boeing and
Airbus by August. That will include the price of the plane, as well as
guarantees on fuel efficiency, maintenance costs and reliability. Joyce said
he'll order the jets by year-end if he decides to push ahead with the flights,
which are known at Qantas as Project Sunrise.
Qantas has said it's sizing up the long-range Airbus A350 against
Boeing's 777X. Boeing or Airbus would deliver the aircraft in 2022 and the
first flights would be in 2023, he said.
Still, there's little margin for error. For example, the
Sydney-London service won't be able to carry extra freight, Joyce said. Direct
flights to New York from Sydney are more achievable, he said.
Qantas is trying to roll out a network of super-long direct
services connecting Australia's eastern seaboard with South America, South
Africa and North America as rising oil prices squeeze profit margins.
Even after promoting Project Sunrise for years, Joyce said he'd be
ruthless. "We will kill the project" if the economics don't stack up,
he said.
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