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Air India resumes flights at London-Heathrow airport

IANS March 22, 2025 213 views

Air India has resumed its regular flight operations at London Heathrow Airport following a major power outage that disrupted services for 24 hours. The incident, caused by a fire at North Hyde plant, affected approximately 200,000 passengers and resulted in the grounding of 1,351 flights. The power failure impacted 37 daily flights connecting major Indian cities with London, forcing diversions to other European airports. Air India confirmed that flight AI111 operated on schedule while AI161, previously diverted to Frankfurt, was cleared for departure.

"The disruption was as big as it gets for our airport" - Thomas Woldbye, Heathrow Airport CEO
London, March 22: A day after flights were grounded at the Heathrow airport, nation's largest carrier Air India said on Saturday that its flights, to and from the Europe's busiest airport, have resumed.

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Power outage at London substation forced Heathrow to ground over 1,300 flights

The shutdown caused inconvenience to as many as 200,000 passengers as at least 1,351 inbound and outbound flights were grounded throughout Friday.

In a statement, Air India said that its operations to and from London Heathrow (LHR) airport have "recommenced after the disruption at the airport yesterday due to a power outage".

"Today's flight AI111 was on schedule and other flights, to and from London, are expected to operate as per schedule. Flight AI161 of 21 March, which was diverted to Frankfurt, is expected to leave Frankfurt at 14:05 pm local time," the airline added.

The carrier had temporarily suspended its flight operations from Heathrow as the airport announced a closure until March 21 midnight due to the power outage.

At least 37 daily flights from India to London's Heathrow airport were disrupted, according to reports. Multiple direct flights connect Heathrow with cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru and Chennai.

Earlier, inbound planes were diverted to other airports in Europe after flames ripped through the North Hyde plant in Hayes, west London, on Thursday evening.

The airport's chief executive Thomas Woldbye apologised to stranded passengers and said the disruption was "as big as it gets for our airport" and that it could not guard itself "100 per cent".

A fire in a substation in the western part of London led to a "significant power outage" and left over 16,000 homes without electricity. According to British media over 150 people were also evacuated.

The London Fire Brigade said it had deployed 10 fire engines and around 70 firefighters and a 200-metre safety cordon was in effect. Local residents were told to stay inside and keep doors and windows closed because of the smoke.

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