Toronto Star

To mitigate jet lag, airline looks to science

Qantas’s new long-haul flights to use cabin lighting, meals to help biological clock adjust

- ANGUS WHITLEY BLOOMBERG

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA— A wave of ultralong flights that will get you halfway around the world in one hop is pushing airlines to deal with the one extra you can’t escape: Relentless insomnia, debilitati­ng fatigue and tormented bowels, better known as jet lag.

Qantas Airways Ltd., which will start the first non-stop service between Australia and Europe in March, is working with scientists in Sydney to limit body-clock breakdown on the 17-hour flight. They’ve tried to make the colour and intensity of the jet’s interior lights mimic dawn and dusk. Cabin temperatur­es and specially made meals will aim to put passengers to sleep or keep them awake — depending on the destinatio­n’s local time.

The Perth-London route is the latest endurance test as new aircraft technologi­es stretch the time a plane can profitably stay in the air. Emirates Airline, Qatar Airways and United Airlines are part of the movement, with flights from the Middle East to New Zealand or Houston to Sydney. The delivery of a new Airbus model later this year will allow Singapore Airlines to resume its 19-hour marathon from Singapore to New York, an epic stress test for mind and body.

Key to the problem is circadian dis- ruption — messing with the internal body clock that regulates everything from brainwave activity to hormone production and cell regenerati­on.

The main cue for resetting that clock is light, said Steve Simpson, academic director of the Charles Perkins Centre, which is carrying out the research with Sydney-based Qantas.

But there’s a baked-in biological catch: The clock can reset by only about 90 minutes a day, even in the right conditions. An ill-timed dose of sunshine or a badly chosen snack at the wrong hour can mean days of suffering, he said.

“What you can do is make sure you’re pushing as quickly as you can to the destinatio­n time zone and getting the timing of things right,” Simpson said. “The way you feel, the way you function — mentally through to bowel movements — is all ultimately controlled by your body clock.”

The Qantas tie-up with psychologi­sts, nutritioni­sts and sleep experts at the University of Sydney highlights an uncomforta­ble truth about ultra-long-haul jet travel: There’s no way to avoid jet lag completely. But to fill the new long-range jets, Qantas and rivals such as Qatar Airways, which flies from Doha to Auckland, need humans to better tolerate the effects of crossing the world in less than a day.

For airlines, the stakes are huge. Qantas is taking eight 787-9 Boeing Co. Dreamliner­s and has options and rights on another 45, a total investment of about $15 billion (U.S.) at current prices. Singapore Air has ordered seven ultra-long-range A350900s from Airbus SE, listed as being worth about $317 million each.

And it doesn’t end there. As interconti­nental air travel becomes af- fordable to more people outside the developed markets in Europe and North America, the demand for daylong direct flights is likely to rise. Qantas has challenged both big plane makers to build a jet by 2022 that can fly 20 hours, fully loaded, from Sydney to London without a break. Called Project Sunrise, it would put Rio de Janeiro, Cape Town, New York or Paris within direct reach of Australia’s eastern seaboard, Qantas says.

But that sunrise on Copacabana beach or the Champs-Elysees comes at a cost. Long-haul journeys increase the risk of a range of affliction­s, including depression and obesity, Simpson said. To learn more, his team will wrap monitoring devices around the wrists and thighs of about 20 passengers on the Perth-London flight on March 24 to see how their bodies cope.

On that route, lights nestled all over the cabin will be phased in over 15 minutes to soften the blow from jet lag, said Phil Capps, Qantas’ head of product planning and developmen­t. Blue light triggers wakefulnes­s and yellow or orange tones encourage sleep, he said.

“To create that natural light on an aircraft travelling many thousands of feet in the air at a very fast speed requires a lot of science,” Capps said.

While these very long flights have their own unique set of challenges, they can allow airlines to attract more higher-paying passengers in business class, who will pay a premium for the saving in time, said Joanna Lu, the Hong Kong-based head of Asian advisory at Flight Ascend Consultanc­y.

“Being stuck on an airliner for more than18 hours is hard to bear,” Lu said. “Unless you fly business.”

 ?? STR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Qantas Airways’ new Perth-London direct route is the latest endurance test as aircraft technologi­es stretch the time a plane can profitably stay in the air.
STR/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Qantas Airways’ new Perth-London direct route is the latest endurance test as aircraft technologi­es stretch the time a plane can profitably stay in the air.

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