Western Morning News (Saturday)

BA grounds entire fleet of iconic Boeing 747s

- NEIL LANCEFIELD Press Associatio­n

BRITISH Airways has retired its fleet of Boeing 747s with immediate effect. The airline was the world’s biggest operator of the 747-400 model.

It was planning to ground its fleet of 31 jumbo jets in 2024 but the end has been hastened by coronaviru­s.

The company said: “It is with great sadness that we can confirm we are proposing to retire our entire 747 fleet with immediate effect.

“It is unlikely our magnificen­t ‘queen of the skies’ will ever operate commercial services for British Airways again due to the downturn in travel caused by the Covid-19 global pandemic.

“While the aircraft will always have a special place in our heart, as we head into the future we will be operating more flights on modern, fueleffici­ent aircraft such as our new A350s and 787s, to help us achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.”

British Airways’ 747-400s have a capacity of 345 passengers and can reach a top speed of 614mph.

It used them for flights to destinatio­ns in China, the US, Canada and Africa.

Aviation consultant John Strickland told the PA news agency that the lack of demand for transatlan­tic travel has hastened the demise of the 747.

He said: “The US market doesn’t really exist at the moment. That’s where BA substantia­lly deploys its 747 fleet.

“Without the US peak summer programme operating and with winter being leaner, it was already looking like this fleet was going to be on the ground for quite some time.”

Mr Strickland said industry forecasts indicate passenger demand may not return to pre-pandemic levels until between 2023 and 2025.

“That was the timescale the 747s were going to be gone anyway,” he added.

British Airways’ predecesso­r BOAC first used the jumbo jets in 1971.

The 747 was the world’s first widebodied jet.

More than 1,500 have been produced by Boeing, and it has historical­ly been a commercial success for the manufactur­er and the airlines.

But Bloomberg reported earlier this month that, after more than 50 years of service, Boeing plans to end production of the jumbo jets in around two years due to airlines turning to smaller planes that burn less fuel for long-haul flights.

Just 30 of the planes were in service as of Tuesday with a further 132 in storage, according to aviation data firm Cirium.

The US’s presidenti­al aircraft fleet includes two identical jets which are modified versions of the 747.

The planes - known as Air Force One when the president is flying on them - are being replaced by two new aircraft, which will also be variants of the jumbo jet.

Mr Strickland said: “The economics of this larger plane meant it was possible to offer lower fares to customers.

“It really expanded the ability of the general public worldwide to travel.”

UK airlines have struggled to cope with the collapse in demand caused by the coronaviru­s crisis, with British Airways, easyJet and Virgin Atlantic all announcing job cuts and reduced operations.

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