Toronto Star

The 20-hour flight is coming. And it may even have a gym

By 2022, ‘Project Sunrise’ aims to fly further than any regular service to date

- ANGUS WHITLEY

SYDNEY— The goal of a non-stop flight from Sydney to London — half the way around the planet — took a leap forward as the world’s top plane makers convinced Qantas Airways Ltd. they can make the 20-hour route a reality.

Ayear after Qantas chief executive officer Alan Joyce publicly challenged Boeing Co. and Airbus SE to design a plane capable of making a viable direct flight from Sydney to London or New York, he says the manufactur­ers have succeeded.

“We’re now comfortabl­e that we think we have vehicles that could do it,” Joyce said in an interview in Qantas’s central Sydney offices.

Project Sunrise, as Qantas calls it, involves configurin­g an aircraft so that it can fly about 300 passengers and their luggage further than any regular service to date, with fuel in hand for unexpected headwinds and emergencie­s.

If the first routes prove viable in 2022, direct connection­s from major cities in the Americas, Europe and Africa to Australia could follow.

Qantas and the manufactur­ers are dreaming up cabin interiors geared toward surviving such marathon flights. There’s scope to incorporat­e bunks, child-care facilities and even somewhere to work out, Joyce said.

“We’re challengin­g ourselves to think outside the box,” he said. “Would you have the space used for other activities — exercise, bar, creche, sleeping areas and berths? Boeing and Airbus have been actually quite creative in coming up with ideas.”

Qantas is sizing up the longrange Airbus A350 against Boeing’s 777X, and executives from both manufactur­ers flew to Sydney to make presentati­ons.

Joyce plans to place an order next year and says neither supplier has its nose in front. Competitio­n for the contract could help Qantas get the design and price it wants.

“We are looking at all the options to meet the Project Sunrise requiremen­ts but can’t comment on the details of our discussion­s with Qantas,” Airbus said in an email.

Boeing said: “We are confident that we can meet the customer’s requiremen­ts in terms of range and capability.”

Airbus in April gave a glimpse of the future when it unveiled at a Hamburg exhibition the sleeping modules that could slot into an aircraft’s cargo compartmen­ts. The berths will initially be available on the A330 from 2020, and potentiall­y on the A350, the company said.

Joyce’s ambitious plan follows a three-year turnaround that resurrecte­d a national airline almost on its knees.

He’s attempting to build an unpreceden­ted network of super-long routes just as the industry’s notorious boom-and-bust cycle may be heading downhill.

Earnings, profit margins and returns on invested capital at airlines worldwide this year will fall to the lowest level since 2014 as higher fuel prices bite, according to the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n.

Qantas, after reporting record annual profit last week, said its fuel bill will jump 21 per cent to about A$3.92 billion (C$3.69 billion) in the year through June 2019.

That’s an advantage for more fuel-efficient aircraft such as Boeing ’s 787 Dreamliner, which help the economics of long-range services.

In 1935, flying from Australia to London took 12 1/2 days and even the luxury flying boats that plied the route later in the decade required as many as 30 stops.

Qantas in March started offering flights between Perth and London, which is the first direct link between Australia and Europe. “London is back in profits,” Joyce told analysts last week.

Other airlines are also eyeing ultra-long flights.

Singapore Airlines Ltd. will restart its non-stop service to New York on Oct. 11 with Airbus’s ultra long-range A350900. The 19-hour service will overtake Qatar Airways’ DohaAuckla­nd route as the world’s longest flight.

Project Sunrise goes further. The routes are so long that Qantas needs sign-off from regulators and a new agreement with pilots. Joyce isn’t deterred.

“I’m actually confident that it will get there and we will have aircraft in 2022,” he said.

 ?? PETER PARKS AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Qantas challenged Boeing and Airbus to design planes capable of a direct flight from Sydney to London or New York.
PETER PARKS AFP/GETTY IMAGES Qantas challenged Boeing and Airbus to design planes capable of a direct flight from Sydney to London or New York.
 ?? WILLIAM WEST AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? “We’re challengin­g ourselves to think outside the box,” said Qantas CEO Alan Joyce, left, pictured with CFO Tino La Spina.
WILLIAM WEST AFP/GETTY IMAGES “We’re challengin­g ourselves to think outside the box,” said Qantas CEO Alan Joyce, left, pictured with CFO Tino La Spina.

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