The National - News

British Airways cancels Abu Dhabi to London flights in Ramadan

- JAMES LANGTON

British Airways has cancelled nearly a dozen flights on its popular Abu Dhabi to London direct service at the start of Ramadan.

The cancellati­ons, which begin next week and continue through the first week of June, are thought to be the result of problems with the RollsRoyce engines on its Boeing 787 Dreamliner­s that have led them to being temporaril­y taken out of service.

The airline’s website tells passengers: “Sorry, there are no direct flights for this route” on selected dates, which currently begin on May 16 and end on June 6.

British Airways offers an alternativ­e with a stopover in Bahrain, but this will cost nearly three times as much for the outbound flight alone.

According to the website, BA’s non-stop flight to London, which is available on June 5, but not between June 2 and June 4, is priced at Dh1,238 in economy class for the Heathrow leg.

On June 6, and the other dates when direct flights are suspended, this soars to about Dh7,000 with a connection in Bahrain. They include six dates in May.

A BA booking agent in Abu Dhabi could say only that the flights had been cancelled for “operationa­l reasons”.

BA’s direct flights from Dubai are not affected. The airline has yet to respond to The National.

British Airways has largely been operating the Dreamliner on the Abu Dhabi route and has 26 of the aircraft in its fleet.

The 787 has experience­d turbine corrosion problems with the Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 engines used by several airlines. The US Federal Aviation Authority last week warned operators to stay within one hour of an airport.

This week it was reported that BA was looking to lease three aircraft from struggling Qatar Airways to cover gaps caused by maintenanc­e to the Dreamliner. Willie Walsh, chief executive of IAG, British Airways’ parent company, had warned that “a number” of Dreamliner­s would be unavailabl­e during May, June and July.

Saj Ahmad, chief analyst at Strategic Aero Research, said the move would be a temporary one, and that the Abu Dhabi route was one of the airline’s most profitable.

The airline was almost certainly using a quieter period – Ramadan – to carry out essential maintenanc­e on its Dreamliner­s and minimise disruption.

“I’d be more concerned if they weren’t implementi­ng a maintenanc­e plan,” he said.

BA’s website now offers a connecting flight using Etihad from Abu Dhabi to Bahrain as an alternativ­e, and then puts passengers on the airline’s regular service from Manama to Heathrow.

Anyone who books two legs separately will find that Etihad offers flights to Bahrain for less than Dh600, while British Airways prices the Bahrain to London leg of its own service at about Dh1,300.

It means savvy travellers would pay less than Dh2,000 to reach the UK, or Dh5,000 less than options presented by the BA website.

Etihad also offers three direct flights a day to Heathrow, from about Dh2,800 during the period when BA is cancelling services. The BA website shows direct flights operating as normal in July and the rest of June.

Last year, BA made changes to the route, cutting out a second leg to Muscat. In its first incarnatio­n as Imperial Airways, the airline began operating services through what is now the UAE in the 1930s and later as BOAC to Abu Dhabi. It also operates two flights a day from Dubai.

 ?? AFP ?? Problems with British Airways’ Boeing 787 Dreamliner­s are thought to be behind cancellati­ons
AFP Problems with British Airways’ Boeing 787 Dreamliner­s are thought to be behind cancellati­ons

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