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Singapore to Newark - Return of the longest haul?

2015-07-02 07:45:06

Jun 25th 2015, 14:19 by J.F | SINGAPORE

UNTIL 2013, the world s longest direct commercial flight was the Singapore

Airlines (SIA) route between Singapore and Newark. Flight 21 took 19 hours to

fly more than 9,500 miles: long, but well within range for the five Airbus

A340-500s that plied the route. The problem was the cost: the A340-500s can

cover long distances but the four-engine planes are not terribly efficient. The

last decade s fuel-price rise hurt. By the end of the flight s nine-year run,

the five planes had been converted into all-business-class cabins, with tickets

priced at S$14,000 ($10,423) a piece. Even that could not save them: the last

of Flight 21 s epic journeys landed at Changi Airport in Singapore on November

25th 2013.

Now SIA wants to resume nonstop flights to America as soon as possible ,

according to Goh Choon Phong, its boss. But in this context, ASAP does not mean

next week, next month or even next year: Mr Goh said that SIA is talking to

Airbus and Boeing about designing a new aircraft, which takes time. Airbus

began designing the A340 family of aircraft in the mid-1970s; the first

A340-500 did not take wing until 2002.

Still, Mr Goh has good reason to return to the action. Today you can only get

as far as Hong Kong from New York flying direct. Three airlines Cathay Pacific,

United and American compete on the route, which helps keep fares below $2,000.

Assuming that many passengers are not dwelling in Hong Kong, but transferring

to other points in Asia, Hong Kong s airport offers the same advantages as

Changi: it is big, pleasant and modern, with ample onward connections. If you

are going to India or South-East Asia Changi probably has the advantage; if you

are flying onward into China then Hong Kong probably does, but you can get

virtually anywhere from either place. Hong Kong could use the competition.

INFOGRAPHIC: The long haul: Flights that ferry us the farthest

For those not flying onward, however, a nonstop flight between Singapore and

New York cannot come soon enough. In this I am not a disinterested observer: I

live and work in Singapore, but I was raised on America s east coast, and much

of my extended family remains in the New York area. My family and I fly between

Singapore and New York at least once a year. The plane-change (usually in

Tokyo) means time and energy lost in repacking carry-ons, going through

security again, standing in line to leave and reboard, and so on.

But it also lets us stretch our legs, and more importantly it allows my two

young kids to run around and let off some steam. I get to eat some surprisingly

good ramen, and the children have found a charming little Irish restaurant

called McDonalds that they like. I suspect most families would prefer to break

up the flight, while those without kids might prefer to save the time and

hassle of changing planes. The question is whether there are enough flyers who

want to go to or through Singapore specifically, rather than Seoul, Tokyo or

Hong Kong, to keep the route profitable.