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Kangaroo Route

The Kangaroo Route is a term coined by Qantas, referring to the commercial passenger air routes flown between Australia and the United Kingdom via the Eastern Hemisphere.[1]

A Qantas Boeing 787-9 among British Airways aircraft at Heathrow Airport

The route has been operated since 1934,[2] but found its name in 1944 from the unique mode of travel of the kangaroo, as the route's "hops" were reminiscent of a kangaroo's hops both use to cover long distances.[3] The term is trademarked and traditionally used by Qantas,[4] although it is often used in the media and by airline competitors to describe all Australia to United Kingdom flights.

In addition to Qantas, by 2003, over 20 airlines operated routes connecting Australia and the UK, including British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Emirates, Etihad, Malaysia Airlines, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines, Thai Airways and Turkish Airlines[5] with most involving a single transfer between flights at their respective hubs. Only British Airways and Qantas offer through direct flights (not requiring passengers to change plane en route), both making a fuel stop at Singapore Changi Airport as of 2024.

Qantas commenced operating non-stop flights from Perth to London with Boeing 787s on 25 March 2018. This ended the era of the continents of Europe and Oceania not being connected by non-stop flights, marking the first time that all of the world's continents, excluding Antarctica, are connected by non-stop flights.[6][7]

Origins of the name edit

 
Qantas Logo for its "Kangaroo Service", used from 1944-1947[8]

Qantas operated the Australian part of the Kangaroo Route for nine years before coining (and later trademarking) the name.

After starting airmail operations between Brisbane and Singapore in 1934,[9] Qantas began operating passenger flights connecting Brisbane to Singapore in 1935 following successful awarding of the Australian government's tender.[10][11]

After disruption to the route due to the emerging hostilities of World War II, the connectivity was famously restored by Qantas with its "Double Sunrise" service connectivity between Perth and Ceylon on the Indian Ocean Route with Catalina flying boats in 1943.[12] With the addition of the land based Liberator aircraft to the route in 1944, the "Indian Ocean Route" was officially renamed "The Kangaroo Service"[13][9][14][15] by Qantas' Managing Director Hudson Fysh and pilot Bill Crowther; a play on words of the aviation term "hop" (referring to a leg of a route), and the hop of a kangaroo, an Australian icon.[16]

Along with the newly created Qantas logo of the flying kangaroo, the terms "Kangaroo Service" and "Kangaroo Route"[17][18][19][20] were trademarked by Qantas and became the airline's branded term to describe Qantas' Australia-United Kingdom connectivity.[21][22]

A significant milestone in 1947 when Qantas began operating the entire Kangaroo Route independently.  This April 1947 inauguration is referred to as the birth date of the Kangaroo Route by Qantas, even though it had been operating a part of that route for almost a decade.[23]

History edit

 
Advertisement for the Qantas Singapore service using the De Havilland 86

Early years (1935–1940) edit

 
A QEA De Havilland 86 at Mt. Isa, operating the Kangaroo Route circa 1937.
 
The QEA Short S23 Empire Flying Boat "Cooee", which inaugurated Qantas' seaplane-operated Kangaroo Route service to Singapore on July 5, 1938.[24]

In 1935 Qantas started flying passengers to Singapore in a De Havilland 86 to connect with London-bound Imperial Airways. London to Brisbane service commenced on 13 April 1935. Imperial Airways and Qantas Empire Airways opened the 12,754-mile (20,526 km) London to Brisbane route for passengers for a single fare £195 (equivalent to $21,300 in 2022). There were no through bookings on the first service because of heavy sector bookings, but there were two through passengers on the next flight that left London on 20 April. The route opened for passengers from Brisbane to London on 17 April; flights were weekly and the journey time was 1212 days.[25][26]

Eastbound passengers from London would first fly from Croydon to Paris, take an overnight train to Brindisi, and fly onward with stops at Athens, Alexandria (overnight), Gaza, Baghdad (overnight), Basra, Kuwait, Bahrain, Sharjah (overnight), Gwadar, Karachi, Jodhpur (overnight), Delhi, Cawnpore, Allahabad, Calcutta (overnight), Akyab, Rangoon, Bangkok (overnight), Alor Star, Singapore (overnight), Batavia, Sourabaya, Rambang (overnight), Koepang, Darwin (overnight), Longreach (overnight), and Charleville.[27] London-Karachi was operated by Imperial Airways, Karachi-Singapore jointly by Imperial and Indian Trans-Continental Airways, and Singapore-Brisbane by Qantas.[28]

Wartime modified operations (1940–1946) edit

Impediment and interruption due to WWII (June 1940 – Feb 1942) edit

On June 11, 1940, Italy entered WWII and the Kangaroo Route connection across the Mediterranean Sea from Egypt was severed with the resulting loss of all access to commercial air routes.[29][30] While direct passenger air connectivity was lost, previous contingency plans were put into action, utilising the structure of the "Horseshoe Route" that connected Australia and England for passengers and airmail via Durban, South Africa where passengers would connect to steamboat service.[31][32] This service was swiftly started just 8 days later with the first flight leaving Australia on June 19, 1940[33] and continuing its operation, modifying as necessary until its final reserve route ("Reserve Route 3") via Broome was lost on February 15, 1942 with the fall of Singapore.[34]

Plans for restoration of the connectivity were started in early 1943, resulting in the ideation, equipping, and successful testing of what would become the Double Sunrise service.[30] Earlier in 1939 an alternative route via the Indian Ocean was proposed and designed by the Australian Government for potential use in case of emergency.[35] The designed route was Port Hedland - Batavia - Christmas Island - Cocos Island - Diego Garcia - The Seychelles - Mombasa.[30][32] This route was surveyed and tested in June 1939 but would ultimately not be used, in part as Batavia had already fallen in March 1942 in the Battle of Java (1942).[36][30]

Innovation and resumption via "The Double Sunrise" (July 1943 – July 1945) edit

 
The QEA Catalina G-AGFL "Altair Star" flying along the coast of Ceylon at the conclusion of a 'Double Sunrise' flight from Australia which operated from July 1943-July 1945.

On July 29, 1943, Qantas resumed the kangaroo route's modified operation, using a fleet of 5 Consolidated PBY Catalina aircraft to cross the Indian ocean nonstop. The planned route was for flights between Crawley, Western Australia, and RAF Base Koggala in southern Ceylon. Designed to exploit the Catalina's extreme flight range, the flights became the longest non-stop commercial air route, covering over 3,500 nautical miles (6,500 kilometres; 4,000 miles) across the Indian Ocean. Navigated without the aid of radio, the crews relied solely on rudimentary navigation by compass and stars during the trip. Taking between 27 and 33 hours, with departure timed so that the flight crossed Japanese occupied territory during darkness, the crew and passengers would observe the sunrise twice, which led to the service being known as "The Double Sunrise".[37] The Double Sunrise flights remain the longest (in terms of airtime) commercial flights in history.

Initially, passengers and mail were then transferred via ground transport from Galle to Karachi connecting with BOAC service onwards to London. In November 1943, this was replaced by adding an additional hop to the kangaroo route operated by the Qantas Catalinas up the Indian coast to Karangi Creek in Karachi.[37]

 
The first QEA Liberator G-AGKT refuelling at Learmonth Airport prior to departing for Colombo in 1945. This was the first plane to have the new Qantas Kangaroo logo applied to it (below cockpit window).[38]

In June 1944, Qantas augmented the Kangaroo Route's Catalina service with an additional route operated by converted Consolidated Liberator bombers. The Liberators flew from Perth to Learmonth before flying a shorter 3,077 mi (4,952 km) over-water route to an airfield northeast of Colombo, but they could make the journey in 17 hours with 5,500 pounds (2,500 kg) of payload, whereas the Catalinas usually required at least 27 hours and their payload was limited to only 1,000 pounds (450 kg). This route was named 'The Kangaroo Service' and was the genesis for the Kangaroo Route's naming. It also marked the first time that Qantas's now-famous Kangaroo logo was used; passengers received a certificate proclaiming them as members of The Order of the Longest Hop.[39]

In June 1945, Avro Lancastrians were introduced on the England–Australia service, and the Liberators and Catalinas were soon shifted to other Qantas routes. The Catalina operated Double Sunrise service ended on 18 July 1945.[40]

Route normalization - Western legs (May 1945) edit

On May 30, 1945 - following the end of the war in the European Theatre, Lancastrian operated flights by BOAC resumed from Hurn Airport in southern England, connecting in Karachi to Qantas' operated service which flew via Karachi - Minneriya (Ceylon) - Learmonth to Sydney.[41][30] Covering the Kangaroo Route in a scheduled time of 70 hours.[42]

Route normalization - Eastern legs (April 1946) edit

On April 7, 1946 - Qantas ended its Indian Ocean Service, and reverted the Kangaroo Route back via Darwin and Singapore.[43] For the first time flying directly from Sydney to Darwin to Singapore, eliminating all previous domestic Australian stops.[44] BOAC and Qantas service combined to operate the Kangaroo Route from Sydney to London time in a new record of 63 hours.[45]

Multiple stops (1947–1973) edit

 
The Qantas Super Constellation "Southern Mist" landing at Heathrow Airport in 1955 after operating the Kangaroo route in 9 hops.
 
A Qantas Boeing 707 behind a De Havilland Comet of British Overseas Airways Corporation at Heathrow in 1963

In 1947, Qantas took over complete operation of the route from Australia to The United Kingdom utilizing their new Lockheed Constellations. BOAC would continue to run its own service in parallel. Qantas first flew the Kangaroo Route on 1 December 1947. A Lockheed Constellation carried 29 passengers and 11 crew from Sydney to London with stops in Darwin, Singapore, Calcutta, Karachi, Cairo, and Tripoli (passengers stayed overnight in Singapore and Cairo).[46] A return fare was £585 (equivalent to $44,700 in 2022), equivalent to 130 weeks average pay.[47]

In the 1950s and 1960s some Qantas Kangaroo Routes featured other stops, including Frankfurt, Zürich, Rome, Athens, Beirut, Tehran, Bombay, and Colombo.[48][49] In May 1958 the Kangaroo Route had 11 westward flights a week: four Qantas Super Constellations, four BOAC Britannias, and one Air India Super Constellation from Sydney to London, one KLM Super Constellation Sydney to Amsterdam, and one TAI Douglas DC-6B Auckland to Paris. In February 1959 Qantas' fastest Super Constellation took 63 hr 45 min Sydney to Heathrow and BOAC's Britannia took 49 hr 25 min. Jet flights (Qantas with Boeing 707) started in 1959; in April 1960 the fastest trip from Sydney to London was 34 hr 30 min with eight stops.

In the late 1950s, Qantas had a round-the-world network, flying Australia to Europe westward on the Kangaroo Route and eastward on the Southern Cross Route (via the Pacific Ocean).[1] In 1964 Qantas started a third route to London via Tahiti, Mexico, and the Caribbean, called the Fiesta Route.[50] Qantas dropped its Southern Cross Route and Fiesta Route in 1975. By 1969, Qantas had 11 Kangaroo Route flights a week from Sydney to London, taking 29–32 hours with 5–6 stops each; BOAC's 7-9 weekly flights previously had 7 stops.

In 1971 Qantas added Boeing 747s, reducing the travel time and number of stops (in the late 1970s flights typically stopped at Singapore and Bahrain). Fares fell, opening air travel to more people with more competition.

One-stop flights (1974–2018) edit

 
A Qantas Boeing 747-400 over London
 
A Qantas Airbus A380 at Heathrow

In April 1974 Qantas commenced operating a one stop service from Perth to London with only one stop in Bombay with Boeing 707s.[51][52]

In 1989 Qantas set a world distance record for commercial jets when a Boeing 747-400, the City of Canberra (VH-OJA), flew non-stop from London to Sydney in just over 20 hours (with special fuel[53] and without passengers or cargo). This was the only nonstop flight ever made between both cities for the next 3 decades.[54]

Starting in January 2009, Qantas began utilising its new A380 aircraft on the Kangaroo Route, raising its capacity to 450 passengers per flight.[55]

As part of a partnership approved in 2013 with Emirates, Qantas announced that its services to London would stop in Dubai rather than Singapore, beginning that same year.[56] Qantas also announced that its services to Frankfurt via Singapore would be discontinued in April 2013, leaving London as its only European destination.[57]

Following years of low demand on the Sydney-Dubai route, Qantas announced in 2017 that its flights between Sydney and London would be reverting to a Singapore stop instead of Dubai from 25 March 2018.[58][59]

Non-stop flights (2018– ) edit

 
Qantas selected the A350-1000 for non-stop flights

Non-stop flights from Perth to London commenced in March 2018 with Boeing 787s,[60] with the Kangaroo route becoming a non-stop route for the first time, while also connecting Australia and Europe via a non-stop route for the first time. These flights operate out of Perth's Terminal 3 rather than the traditional T1 in order to facilitate seamless transfers from Qantas domestic flights. The non-stop service forms part of Qantas' secondary Kangaroo route QF9/10, between Melbourne and London via Perth. The route also opens up the possibility of further direct flights to Europe from Perth such as Paris and Frankfurt. In June 2022, Qantas launched a non-stop seasonal service from Perth to Rome.[61]

In late March 2020, prior to Qantas cutting all international services due to the COVID-19 pandemic, several repatriation flights were operated with a routing of Sydney-Darwin-London.[62] The Singaporean government had banned transit passengers and airspace in the Middle East was closed, due to the pandemic. This was the first time an Airbus A380 flew nonstop between Australia and Europe.[63]

In November 2021, Qantas resumed non-stop Kangaroo Route flights, this time from Darwin to London[64] before resuming the non-stop route between Perth and London in May 2022 following the reopening of Western Australia for international travel.[65]

Qantas' evolution of the Kangaroo Route edit

Since its founding in 1935, Qantas has evolved the Kangaroo Route over time in terms of "hops" (routings), duration, and aircraft used. Illustrated in the below table are snapshots of that ongoing evolution over the years.

Year Number of stops Total durationnote Route (From-via-To) Aircraft and operator Passengers
1935 38[66][67][68] 12.5 days[66][69][70][71][72] Brisbane
Stops 1-17 operated by Qantas Empire Airways
  • 1. Roma
  • 2. Charleville
  • 3. Blackall
  • 4. Longreach
  • 5. Winton
  • 6. Cloncurry
  • 7. Mt. Isa
  • 8. Camooweal
  • 9. Brunette Downs
  • 10. Newcastle Waters
  • 11. Daly Waters
  • 12. Darwin
  • 13. Koepang (Kupang, Indonesia)
  • 14. Rambang (Lombok, Indonesia)
  • 15. Sourabaya (Surabaya, Indonesia)
  • 16. Batavia (Jakarta, Indonesia)
  • 17. Singapore
Stops 18-27 operated by Indian Trans-Continental Airways
  • 18. Alor Setar, Kedah (Malaysia)
  • 19. Bangkok
  • 20. Rangoon (Yangon)
  • 21. Akyab (Sittwe)
  • 22. Calcutta (Kolkata)
  • 23. Allahabad
  • 24. Cawnpore (Kanpur)
  • 25. Delhi
  • 26. Jodhpur
  • 27. Karachi
Stops 28-38 operated by Imperial Airways
  • 28. Gwadar
  • 29. Sharjah (Sharjah, UAE)
  • 30. Bahrain
  • 31. Basra
  • 32. Baghdad
  • 33. Gaza, Palestine (Tel Aviv, Israel)
  • 34. Alexandria
  • 35. Mirabello
  • 36. Athens
  • 37. Brindisi
  • 38. Paris via Train

Croydon (then train to London)

De Havilland 86 (Qantas Empire Airways)[73][74]
Armstrong Whitworth Atalanta (Indian Trans-continental Airways)
Handley Page H.P.42 "Hannibal" (Imperial Airways)
Handley Page H.P.45 "Heracles" (Imperial Airways)[75]
9[73]
1937 41[72][67] 12.5 days[76] Brisbane
Stops 1-18 operated by Qantas Empire Airways
  • 1. Roma
  • 2. Charleville
  • 3. Blackall
  • 4. Longreach
  • 5. Winton
  • 6. Cloncurry
  • 7. Mt. Isa
  • 8. Camooweal
  • 9. Avon Downs
  • 10. Newcastle Waters
  • 11. Daly Waters
  • 12. Katherine
  • 13. Darwin
  • 14. Koepang (Kupang, Indonesia)
  • 15. Rambang (Lombok, Indonesia)
  • 16. Sourabaya (Surabaya, Indonesia)
  • 17. Batavia (Jakarta, Indonesia)
  • 18. Singapore
Stops 19-28 operated by Indian Trans-Continental Airways
  • 19. Penang
  • 20. Bangkok
  • 21. Rangoon (Yangon)
  • 22. Akyab (Sittwe)
  • 23. Calcutta (Kolkata)
  • 24. Allahabad
  • 25. Cawnpore (Kanpur)
  • 26. Delhi
  • 27. Jodhpur
  • 28. Karachi
Stops 29-41 operated by Imperial Airways
  • 29. Gwadar
  • 30. Sharjah (Sharjah, UAE)
  • 31. Bahrain
  • 32. Kuwait
  • 33. Basra
  • 34. Baghdad
  • 35. Gaza, Palestine (Tel Aviv, Israel)
  • 36. Alexandria
  • 37. Athens
  • 38. Brindisi
  • 39. Rome
  • 40. Marseilles
  • 41. Macon

Southampton, England (then train to London)

De Havilland 86 (Qantas Empire Airways)
Armstrong Whitworth Atalanta (Indian Trans-continental Airways)
Handley Page H.P.42 "Hannibal" (Imperial Airways)
Handley Page H.P.45 "Heracles" (Imperial Airways)
9
1938 35[77][78] 9 days 20 hours[77] Sydney
Stops 1-12 operated by Qantas Empire Airways
  • 1. Brisbane
  • 2. Gladstone
  • 3. Townsville
  • 4. Karumba
  • 5. Groote Eylandt
  • 6. Darwin
  • 7. Koepang (Kupang, Indonesia)
  • 8. Bima (Bima, Indonesia)
  • 9. Sourabaya (Surabaya, Indonesia)
  • 10. Batavia (Jakarta, Indonesia)
  • 11. Klabat Bay (Belinyu, Indonesia)
  • 12. Singapore
Stops 13-35 operated by Imperial Airways
  • 13. Penang
  • 14. Koh Samui
  • 15. Bangkok
  • 16. Rangoon (Yangon)
  • 17. Akyab (Sittwe)
  • 18. Calcutta (Kolkata)
  • 19. Allahabad
  • 20. Gwalior
  • 21. Rajsamand
  • 22. Karachi
  • 23. Gwadar
  • 24. Dubai (Dubai, UAE)
  • 25. Bahrain
  • 26. Basra
  • 27. Habbaniyeh
  • 28. Tiberias, Palestine (Tiberias, Israel)
  • 29. Alexandria
  • 30. Mirabello
  • 31. Athens
  • 32. Brindisi
  • 33. Rome
  • 34. Marseilles
  • 35. St. Nazaire

Southampton, England (then train to London)

15[79][81]
1947 6[82][78][83] 3 days 20 hours[82][84] Sydney
  1. Darwin
  2. Singapore
  3. Calcutta (Kolkata)
  4. Karachi
  5. Cairo
  6. Tripoli

London

Lockheed Constellation[82][85] 29[78]
1955 8[86] 3 days 6 hours[86] Sydney
  1. Darwin
  2. Jakarta
  3. Singapore
  4. Bangkok
  5. Calcutta (Kolkata)
  6. Karachi
  7. Cairo
  8. Rome

London

Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation 57[87][88]
1959 8[89] 38 hours[89] Sydney
  1. Darwin
  2. Singapore
  3. Bangkok
  4. Calcutta (Kolkata)
  5. Karachi
  6. Bahrain
  7. Cairo
  8. Rome

London

Boeing 707-138 120[78][88]
1965 5[90] 30 hours[90] Sydney
  1. Singapore
  2. Calcutta (Kolkata)
  3. Karachi
  4. Cairo
  5. Rome

London

Boeing 707-320 220[87]
1971 2[91] 26 hours[92] Sydney
  1. Singapore
  2. Bahrain

London

Boeing 747-200B 356[93][94]
1977 1[91] 23 hours[78] Perth
  1. Bombay (Mumbai)

London

Boeing 747-200B[95] 436[96]
1990 1[97] 24 hours[87] Sydney
  1. Singapore

London

Boeing 747-400 412[98]
2013 1[99] 23 hours 30 min[100] Sydney
  1. Dubai (aka ˈThe Falcon Routeˈ)[101]

London

Airbus A380-800[100] 484[102][87]
2018 0 17 hours 20 min[103] Perth

London

Boeing 787-9 236[104]
2026[105] 0[106] 20 hours (estimated)[107] Sydney

London

Airbus A350-1000 238[108]

Note: ^ Duration is total elapsed travel time westbound (including stops)

Other competing Australia to United Kingdom one-stop flights edit

While "The Kangaroo Route™ " is a trademarked term belonging to Qantas,[4] it is often genericized by the media, other operators, and even Qantas themselves to refer to all flights between Australia and the United Kingdom.

Today Qantas remains the sole operator of "The Kangaroo Route" as well as the only nonstop flight between Australia and the United Kingdom. British Airways continues to operate its legacy route it has served since 1935 when it was Imperial Airways,[109] offering the only other direct flight from Australia to the United Kingdom.

Forming a competitive market, there are over 20 airlines operating competing one-stop flights from Australia to the United Kingdom via the Eastern Hemisphere as seen in the table below:

Table of other competing one-stop Australia-United Kingdom flights
Origin in Australia Airline Intermediate Stop/Transit Hub Destination in United Kingdom
  Adelaide Qatar Airways[110]   Doha   Birmingham
  Edinburgh
  London–Gatwick
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong   London–Heathrow
Malaysia Airlines[112]   Kuala Lumpur
Qantas[113]   Perth
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong   Manchester
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
  Brisbane Qatar Airways[110]   Doha   Birmingham
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha   Edinburgh
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   Glasgow
China Eastern[116][117]   Shanghai–Pudong   London–Gatwick
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong   London–Heathrow
China Airlines[118]   Taipei–Taoyuan
China Eastern[116][117]   Shanghai–Pudong
China Southern[119][120]   Guangzhou
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Korean Air[121]   Seoul–Incheon
Malaysia Airlines[112]   Kuala Lumpur
Qantas[122][113]   Perth
  Singapore
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   London–Stansted
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong   Manchester
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   Newcastle
  Cairns Qantas[113]   Perth   London–Heathrow
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
Singapore Airlines[114]   Manchester
  Canberra Qantas[113]   Perth   London–Heathrow
  Darwin Qantas[113]   Perth   London–Heathrow
Qantas[122]   Singapore
Singapore Airlines[114]   Manchester
  Melbourne Air India[123]   New Delhi   Birmingham
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha   Edinburgh
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   Glasgow
China Eastern[116]   Shanghai–Pudong   London–Gatwick
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Air China[124]   Beijing–Capital   London–Heathrow
Air India[123][125][126]   Mumbai
  New Delhi
Asiana Airlines[127][note 1]   Seoul–Incheon
Beijing Capital Airlines[129]   Qingdao
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong
China Airlines[118]   Taipei–Taoyuan
China Eastern[116]   Shanghai–Pudong
China Southern[119]   Guangzhou
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Etihad Airways[130]   Abu Dhabi
Malaysia Airlines[112]   Kuala Lumpur
Qantas[122][113]   Perth
  Singapore
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Royal Brunei Airlines[131]   Brunei
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
SriLankan Airlines[132]   Colombo
Thai Airways[133]   Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi
Vietnam Airlines[134][135]   Ho Chi Minh City
  Hanoi
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   London–Stansted
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong   Manchester
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Etihad Airways[130]   Abu Dhabi
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   Newcastle
  Perth Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   Birmingham
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Qatar Airways[110]   Edinburgh
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   Glasgow
Emirates[115]   London–Gatwick
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Air Mauritius[136]   Port Louis   London–Heathrow
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Malaysia Airlines[112]   Kuala Lumpur
Qantas[137][122] Non-Stop
  Singapore
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
Vietnam Airlines[134][138]   Ho Chi Minh City
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   London–Stansted
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong   Manchester
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   Newcastle
  Sydney Air India[123]   New Delhi   Birmingham
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Qatar Airways[110]   Edinburgh
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   Glasgow
China Eastern[116]   Shanghai–Pudong   London–Gatwick
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Air China[124]   Beijing–Capital   London–Heathrow
Air India[123]   New Delhi
All Nippon Airways[139]   Tokyo–Haneda
Asiana Airlines[127]   Seoul–Incheon
Beijing Capital Airlines[129]   Qingdao
British Airways[140]   Singapore
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong
China Airlines[118]   Taipei–Taoyuan
China Eastern[116]   Shanghai–Pudong
China Southern[119]   Guangzhou
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Etihad Airways[130]   Abu Dhabi
Japan Airlines[141]   Tokyo–Haneda
Korean Air[121]   Seoul-Incheon
Malaysia Airlines[112]   Kuala Lumpur
Qantas[122][113]   Perth
  Singapore
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
SriLankan Airlines[132]   Colombo
Thai Airways[133]   Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi
Tianjin Airlines[142][143]   Chongqing
Vietnam Airlines[134][135]   Ho Chi Minh City
  Hanoi
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   London–Stansted
Cathay Pacific[111]   Hong Kong   Manchester
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International
Etihad Airways[130]   Abu Dhabi
Qatar Airways[110]   Doha
Singapore Airlines[114]   Singapore
Emirates[115]   Dubai–International   Newcastle

Project Sunrise edit

On 25 August 2017, Qantas announced Project Sunrise, aiming to fly non-stop from the East Coast of Australia (Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane) to London, Paris, Cape Town, Rio de Janeiro and New York City by 2022, and challenged Boeing and Airbus to create aircraft that can travel to such places without stopping.[144] In 2019, Qantas issued a request for proposal for an aircraft with over 300 seats in four classes, to be delivered from 2022.[145] Both Boeing and Airbus submitted proposals in 2019. Boeing announced some delays in the B777-8 project in August 2019 after Etihad Airways dropped orders made in 2013, but the company made it clear that it remained in contention for Project Sunrise.[146]

On 18–20 October 2019, Qantas made a 19-hour test flight QF7879 with a Boeing 787-9 from New York to Sydney.[147] The next month, Qantas operated its first 19-20 hour test flight from London to Sydney using again a Boeing 787-9.[148] Two months later, on 13 December 2019, Qantas announced that their preferred aircraft for the project was the Airbus A350-1000. The aircraft will have an additional fuel tank and slightly increased MTOW to deliver the performance required on the Project Sunrise routes. Qantas stated they were working with Airbus to order up to 12 aircraft, with the final decision expected within 2020.[149]

On 5 May 2020, Qantas Group CEO Alan Joyce announced that Project Sunrise would be put on hold due to the impact of COVID-19 on global travel.[150] Qantas would review its project at the end of 2021, towards a 2024 start of the 21-hour flights, meaning a delay of one year.[151]

On 2 May 2022, Qantas placed a formal order for 12 Airbus A350-1000 aircraft for Project Sunrise flights to commence in "late 2025" between its first two routes: Sydney to London, and Sydney to New York.[105][152] The 238 seats will be split into 6 first class suites (three-abreast), 52 business class suites (four-abreast), 40 premium economy seats at 40″ pitch (eight-abreast) and 140 economy class seats at 33″ pitch (nine-abreast).[153] Qantas expects these ultra-long-haul flights to drive an annual earnings increase of A$400 million ($261 million) in the first full year with all 12 aircraft in service.[154]

In February 2024, Qantas announced that due to manufacturing delays (which were blamed on a regulator required fuel-tank redesign[155] ), delivery of the A350-1000 aircraft would be delayed by 6 months, thus the launch of the first project Sunrise flights would be delayed until mid-2026.[156][157]

In literature edit

The book Beyond the Blue Horizon by travel correspondent Alexander Frater documents the author's attempt to fly all the sectors on the original 1935 Imperial/Qantas London-Brisbane route in 1984.

See also edit

  • Southern Cross Route – the Kangaroo Route's counterpart traveling via the Western Hemisphere
  • Wallaby Route - Route launched by Qantas in 1952 connecting Sydney to Johannesburg
  • Fiesta Route - Qantas' route that existed from 1964-1975 connecting Sydney to London via Fiji, Tahiti, Acapulco, Mexico City, The Bahamas, and Bermuda.[158][159]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Service ends on 29 Feb 2024[128]

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Calder, Simon (22 March 2018). "This is how the journey from Britain to Australia went from 28 days to 17 hours". The Independent. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  • Gebicki, Michael (13 August 2023). "Non-stop flights v layovers: Which is the best option?". Traveller. Retrieved 14 August 2023.
  • Benson, Shan (director) (1962). The Big Boomerang (Motion picture). Australia: Collings Productions.
    • Clip showing early Kangaroo Route development up to circa end of 1930's
    • Clip showing Kangaroo Route departure on 707 circa 1961

kangaroo, route, term, coined, qantas, referring, commercial, passenger, routes, flown, between, australia, united, kingdom, eastern, hemisphere, qantas, boeing, among, british, airways, aircraft, heathrow, airportthe, route, been, operated, since, 1934, found. The Kangaroo Route is a term coined by Qantas referring to the commercial passenger air routes flown between Australia and the United Kingdom via the Eastern Hemisphere 1 A Qantas Boeing 787 9 among British Airways aircraft at Heathrow AirportThe route has been operated since 1934 2 but found its name in 1944 from the unique mode of travel of the kangaroo as the route s hops were reminiscent of a kangaroo s hops both use to cover long distances 3 The term is trademarked and traditionally used by Qantas 4 although it is often used in the media and by airline competitors to describe all Australia to United Kingdom flights In addition to Qantas by 2003 over 20 airlines operated routes connecting Australia and the UK including British Airways Cathay Pacific Emirates Etihad Malaysia Airlines Qatar Airways Singapore Airlines Thai Airways and Turkish Airlines 5 with most involving a single transfer between flights at their respective hubs Only British Airways and Qantas offer through direct flights not requiring passengers to change plane en route both making a fuel stop at Singapore Changi Airport as of 2024 Qantas commenced operating non stop flights from Perth to London with Boeing 787s on 25 March 2018 This ended the era of the continents of Europe and Oceania not being connected by non stop flights marking the first time that all of the world s continents excluding Antarctica are connected by non stop flights 6 7 Contents 1 Origins of the name 2 History 2 1 Early years 1935 1940 2 2 Wartime modified operations 1940 1946 2 2 1 Impediment and interruption due to WWII June 1940 Feb 1942 2 2 2 Innovation and resumption via The Double Sunrise July 1943 July 1945 2 2 2 1 Route normalization Western legs May 1945 2 2 2 2 Route normalization Eastern legs April 1946 2 3 Multiple stops 1947 1973 2 4 One stop flights 1974 2018 2 5 Non stop flights 2018 3 Qantas evolution of the Kangaroo Route 4 Other competing Australia to United Kingdom one stop flights 5 Project Sunrise 6 In literature 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further readingOrigins of the name edit nbsp Qantas Logo for its Kangaroo Service used from 1944 1947 8 Qantas operated the Australian part of the Kangaroo Route for nine years before coining and later trademarking the name After starting airmail operations between Brisbane and Singapore in 1934 9 Qantas began operating passenger flights connecting Brisbane to Singapore in 1935 following successful awarding of the Australian government s tender 10 11 After disruption to the route due to the emerging hostilities of World War II the connectivity was famously restored by Qantas with its Double Sunrise service connectivity between Perth and Ceylon on the Indian Ocean Route with Catalina flying boats in 1943 12 With the addition of the land based Liberator aircraft to the route in 1944 the Indian Ocean Route was officially renamed The Kangaroo Service 13 9 14 15 by Qantas Managing Director Hudson Fysh and pilot Bill Crowther a play on words of the aviation term hop referring to a leg of a route and the hop of a kangaroo an Australian icon 16 Along with the newly created Qantas logo of the flying kangaroo the terms Kangaroo Service and Kangaroo Route 17 18 19 20 were trademarked by Qantas and became the airline s branded term to describe Qantas Australia United Kingdom connectivity 21 22 A significant milestone in 1947 when Qantas began operating the entire Kangaroo Route independently This April 1947 inauguration is referred to as the birth date of the Kangaroo Route by Qantas even though it had been operating a part of that route for almost a decade 23 History edit nbsp Advertisement for the Qantas Singapore service using the De Havilland 86Early years 1935 1940 edit nbsp A QEA De Havilland 86 at Mt Isa operating the Kangaroo Route circa 1937 nbsp The QEA Short S23 Empire Flying Boat Cooee which inaugurated Qantas seaplane operated Kangaroo Route service to Singapore on July 5 1938 24 In 1935 Qantas started flying passengers to Singapore in a De Havilland 86 to connect with London bound Imperial Airways London to Brisbane service commenced on 13 April 1935 Imperial Airways and Qantas Empire Airways opened the 12 754 mile 20 526 km London to Brisbane route for passengers for a single fare 195 equivalent to 21 300 in 2022 There were no through bookings on the first service because of heavy sector bookings but there were two through passengers on the next flight that left London on 20 April The route opened for passengers from Brisbane to London on 17 April flights were weekly and the journey time was 121 2 days 25 26 Eastbound passengers from London would first fly from Croydon to Paris take an overnight train to Brindisi and fly onward with stops at Athens Alexandria overnight Gaza Baghdad overnight Basra Kuwait Bahrain Sharjah overnight Gwadar Karachi Jodhpur overnight Delhi Cawnpore Allahabad Calcutta overnight Akyab Rangoon Bangkok overnight Alor Star Singapore overnight Batavia Sourabaya Rambang overnight Koepang Darwin overnight Longreach overnight and Charleville 27 London Karachi was operated by Imperial Airways Karachi Singapore jointly by Imperial and Indian Trans Continental Airways and Singapore Brisbane by Qantas 28 Wartime modified operations 1940 1946 edit Impediment and interruption due to WWII June 1940 Feb 1942 edit On June 11 1940 Italy entered WWII and the Kangaroo Route connection across the Mediterranean Sea from Egypt was severed with the resulting loss of all access to commercial air routes 29 30 While direct passenger air connectivity was lost previous contingency plans were put into action utilising the structure of the Horseshoe Route that connected Australia and England for passengers and airmail via Durban South Africa where passengers would connect to steamboat service 31 32 This service was swiftly started just 8 days later with the first flight leaving Australia on June 19 1940 33 and continuing its operation modifying as necessary until its final reserve route Reserve Route 3 via Broome was lost on February 15 1942 with the fall of Singapore 34 Plans for restoration of the connectivity were started in early 1943 resulting in the ideation equipping and successful testing of what would become the Double Sunrise service 30 Earlier in 1939 an alternative route via the Indian Ocean was proposed and designed by the Australian Government for potential use in case of emergency 35 The designed route was Port Hedland Batavia Christmas Island Cocos Island Diego Garcia The Seychelles Mombasa 30 32 This route was surveyed and tested in June 1939 but would ultimately not be used in part as Batavia had already fallen in March 1942 in the Battle of Java 1942 36 30 Innovation and resumption via The Double Sunrise July 1943 July 1945 edit nbsp The QEA Catalina G AGFL Altair Star flying along the coast of Ceylon at the conclusion of a Double Sunrise flight from Australia which operated from July 1943 July 1945 See also The Double Sunrise On July 29 1943 Qantas resumed the kangaroo route s modified operation using a fleet of 5 Consolidated PBY Catalina aircraft to cross the Indian ocean nonstop The planned route was for flights between Crawley Western Australia and RAF Base Koggala in southern Ceylon Designed to exploit the Catalina s extreme flight range the flights became the longest non stop commercial air route covering over 3 500 nautical miles 6 500 kilometres 4 000 miles across the Indian Ocean Navigated without the aid of radio the crews relied solely on rudimentary navigation by compass and stars during the trip Taking between 27 and 33 hours with departure timed so that the flight crossed Japanese occupied territory during darkness the crew and passengers would observe the sunrise twice which led to the service being known as The Double Sunrise 37 The Double Sunrise flights remain the longest in terms of airtime commercial flights in history Initially passengers and mail were then transferred via ground transport from Galle to Karachi connecting with BOAC service onwards to London In November 1943 this was replaced by adding an additional hop to the kangaroo route operated by the Qantas Catalinas up the Indian coast to Karangi Creek in Karachi 37 nbsp The first QEA Liberator G AGKT refuelling at Learmonth Airport prior to departing for Colombo in 1945 This was the first plane to have the new Qantas Kangaroo logo applied to it below cockpit window 38 In June 1944 Qantas augmented the Kangaroo Route s Catalina service with an additional route operated by converted Consolidated Liberator bombers The Liberators flew from Perth to Learmonth before flying a shorter 3 077 mi 4 952 km over water route to an airfield northeast of Colombo but they could make the journey in 17 hours with 5 500 pounds 2 500 kg of payload whereas the Catalinas usually required at least 27 hours and their payload was limited to only 1 000 pounds 450 kg This route was named The Kangaroo Service and was the genesis for the Kangaroo Route s naming It also marked the first time that Qantas s now famous Kangaroo logo was used passengers received a certificate proclaiming them as members of The Order of the Longest Hop 39 In June 1945 Avro Lancastrians were introduced on the England Australia service and the Liberators and Catalinas were soon shifted to other Qantas routes The Catalina operated Double Sunrise service ended on 18 July 1945 40 Route normalization Western legs May 1945 edit On May 30 1945 following the end of the war in the European Theatre Lancastrian operated flights by BOAC resumed from Hurn Airport in southern England connecting in Karachi to Qantas operated service which flew via Karachi Minneriya Ceylon Learmonth to Sydney 41 30 Covering the Kangaroo Route in a scheduled time of 70 hours 42 Route normalization Eastern legs April 1946 edit On April 7 1946 Qantas ended its Indian Ocean Service and reverted the Kangaroo Route back via Darwin and Singapore 43 For the first time flying directly from Sydney to Darwin to Singapore eliminating all previous domestic Australian stops 44 BOAC and Qantas service combined to operate the Kangaroo Route from Sydney to London time in a new record of 63 hours 45 Multiple stops 1947 1973 edit nbsp The Qantas Super Constellation Southern Mist landing at Heathrow Airport in 1955 after operating the Kangaroo route in 9 hops nbsp A Qantas Boeing 707 behind a De Havilland Comet of British Overseas Airways Corporation at Heathrow in 1963In 1947 Qantas took over complete operation of the route from Australia to The United Kingdom utilizing their new Lockheed Constellations BOAC would continue to run its own service in parallel Qantas first flew the Kangaroo Route on 1 December 1947 A Lockheed Constellation carried 29 passengers and 11 crew from Sydney to London with stops in Darwin Singapore Calcutta Karachi Cairo and Tripoli passengers stayed overnight in Singapore and Cairo 46 A return fare was 585 equivalent to 44 700 in 2022 equivalent to 130 weeks average pay 47 In the 1950s and 1960s some Qantas Kangaroo Routes featured other stops including Frankfurt Zurich Rome Athens Beirut Tehran Bombay and Colombo 48 49 In May 1958 the Kangaroo Route had 11 westward flights a week four Qantas Super Constellations four BOAC Britannias and one Air India Super Constellation from Sydney to London one KLM Super Constellation Sydney to Amsterdam and one TAI Douglas DC 6B Auckland to Paris In February 1959 Qantas fastest Super Constellation took 63 hr 45 min Sydney to Heathrow and BOAC s Britannia took 49 hr 25 min Jet flights Qantas with Boeing 707 started in 1959 in April 1960 the fastest trip from Sydney to London was 34 hr 30 min with eight stops In the late 1950s Qantas had a round the world network flying Australia to Europe westward on the Kangaroo Route and eastward on the Southern Cross Route via the Pacific Ocean 1 In 1964 Qantas started a third route to London via Tahiti Mexico and the Caribbean called the Fiesta Route 50 Qantas dropped its Southern Cross Route and Fiesta Route in 1975 By 1969 Qantas had 11 Kangaroo Route flights a week from Sydney to London taking 29 32 hours with 5 6 stops each BOAC s 7 9 weekly flights previously had 7 stops In 1971 Qantas added Boeing 747s reducing the travel time and number of stops in the late 1970s flights typically stopped at Singapore and Bahrain Fares fell opening air travel to more people with more competition One stop flights 1974 2018 edit nbsp A Qantas Boeing 747 400 over London nbsp A Qantas Airbus A380 at HeathrowIn April 1974 Qantas commenced operating a one stop service from Perth to London with only one stop in Bombay with Boeing 707s 51 52 In 1989 Qantas set a world distance record for commercial jets when a Boeing 747 400 the City of Canberra VH OJA flew non stop from London to Sydney in just over 20 hours with special fuel 53 and without passengers or cargo This was the only nonstop flight ever made between both cities for the next 3 decades 54 Starting in January 2009 Qantas began utilising its new A380 aircraft on the Kangaroo Route raising its capacity to 450 passengers per flight 55 As part of a partnership approved in 2013 with Emirates Qantas announced that its services to London would stop in Dubai rather than Singapore beginning that same year 56 Qantas also announced that its services to Frankfurt via Singapore would be discontinued in April 2013 leaving London as its only European destination 57 Following years of low demand on the Sydney Dubai route Qantas announced in 2017 that its flights between Sydney and London would be reverting to a Singapore stop instead of Dubai from 25 March 2018 58 59 Non stop flights 2018 edit nbsp Qantas selected the A350 1000 for non stop flightsNon stop flights from Perth to London commenced in March 2018 with Boeing 787s 60 with the Kangaroo route becoming a non stop route for the first time while also connecting Australia and Europe via a non stop route for the first time These flights operate out of Perth s Terminal 3 rather than the traditional T1 in order to facilitate seamless transfers from Qantas domestic flights The non stop service forms part of Qantas secondary Kangaroo route QF9 10 between Melbourne and London via Perth The route also opens up the possibility of further direct flights to Europe from Perth such as Paris and Frankfurt In June 2022 Qantas launched a non stop seasonal service from Perth to Rome 61 In late March 2020 prior to Qantas cutting all international services due to the COVID 19 pandemic several repatriation flights were operated with a routing of Sydney Darwin London 62 The Singaporean government had banned transit passengers and airspace in the Middle East was closed due to the pandemic This was the first time an Airbus A380 flew nonstop between Australia and Europe 63 In November 2021 Qantas resumed non stop Kangaroo Route flights this time from Darwin to London 64 before resuming the non stop route between Perth and London in May 2022 following the reopening of Western Australia for international travel 65 Qantas evolution of the Kangaroo Route editSince its founding in 1935 Qantas has evolved the Kangaroo Route over time in terms of hops routings duration and aircraft used Illustrated in the below table are snapshots of that ongoing evolution over the years Year Number of stops Total durationnote Route From via To Aircraft and operator Passengers1935 38 66 67 68 12 5 days 66 69 70 71 72 Brisbane Stops 1 17 operated by Qantas Empire Airways 1 Roma2 Charleville3 Blackall4 Longreach5 Winton6 Cloncurry7 Mt Isa8 Camooweal9 Brunette Downs10 Newcastle Waters11 Daly Waters12 Darwin13 Koepang Kupang Indonesia 14 Rambang Lombok Indonesia 15 Sourabaya Surabaya Indonesia 16 Batavia Jakarta Indonesia 17 Singapore Stops 18 27 operated by Indian Trans Continental Airways 18 Alor Setar Kedah Malaysia 19 Bangkok20 Rangoon Yangon 21 Akyab Sittwe 22 Calcutta Kolkata 23 Allahabad24 Cawnpore Kanpur 25 Delhi26 Jodhpur27 Karachi Stops 28 38 operated by Imperial Airways 28 Gwadar29 Sharjah Sharjah UAE 30 Bahrain31 Basra32 Baghdad33 Gaza Palestine Tel Aviv Israel 34 Alexandria35 Mirabello36 Athens37 Brindisi38 Paris via Train Croydon then train to London De Havilland 86 Qantas Empire Airways 73 74 Armstrong Whitworth Atalanta Indian Trans continental Airways Handley Page H P 42 Hannibal Imperial Airways Handley Page H P 45 Heracles Imperial Airways 75 9 73 1937 41 72 67 12 5 days 76 Brisbane Stops 1 18 operated by Qantas Empire Airways 1 Roma2 Charleville3 Blackall4 Longreach5 Winton6 Cloncurry7 Mt Isa8 Camooweal9 Avon Downs10 Newcastle Waters11 Daly Waters12 Katherine13 Darwin14 Koepang Kupang Indonesia 15 Rambang Lombok Indonesia 16 Sourabaya Surabaya Indonesia 17 Batavia Jakarta Indonesia 18 Singapore Stops 19 28 operated by Indian Trans Continental Airways 19 Penang20 Bangkok21 Rangoon Yangon 22 Akyab Sittwe 23 Calcutta Kolkata 24 Allahabad25 Cawnpore Kanpur 26 Delhi27 Jodhpur28 Karachi Stops 29 41 operated by Imperial Airways 29 Gwadar30 Sharjah Sharjah UAE 31 Bahrain32 Kuwait33 Basra34 Baghdad35 Gaza Palestine Tel Aviv Israel 36 Alexandria37 Athens38 Brindisi39 Rome40 Marseilles41 Macon Southampton England then train to London De Havilland 86 Qantas Empire Airways Armstrong Whitworth Atalanta Indian Trans continental Airways Handley Page H P 42 Hannibal Imperial Airways Handley Page H P 45 Heracles Imperial Airways 91938 35 77 78 9 days 20 hours 77 Sydney Stops 1 12 operated by Qantas Empire Airways 1 Brisbane2 Gladstone3 Townsville4 Karumba5 Groote Eylandt6 Darwin7 Koepang Kupang Indonesia 8 Bima Bima Indonesia 9 Sourabaya Surabaya Indonesia 10 Batavia Jakarta Indonesia 11 Klabat Bay Belinyu Indonesia 12 Singapore Stops 13 35 operated by Imperial Airways 13 Penang14 Koh Samui15 Bangkok16 Rangoon Yangon 17 Akyab Sittwe 18 Calcutta Kolkata 19 Allahabad20 Gwalior21 Rajsamand22 Karachi23 Gwadar24 Dubai Dubai UAE 25 Bahrain26 Basra27 Habbaniyeh28 Tiberias Palestine Tiberias Israel 29 Alexandria30 Mirabello31 Athens32 Brindisi33 Rome34 Marseilles35 St Nazaire Southampton England then train to London Short S23 C Class Empire flying boat Qantas Empire Airways 79 Short S23 C Class Empire flying boat Imperial Airways 80 15 79 81 1947 6 82 78 83 3 days 20 hours 82 84 Sydney Darwin Singapore Calcutta Kolkata Karachi Cairo Tripoli London Lockheed Constellation 82 85 29 78 1955 8 86 3 days 6 hours 86 Sydney Darwin Jakarta Singapore Bangkok Calcutta Kolkata Karachi Cairo Rome London Lockheed L 1049 Super Constellation 57 87 88 1959 8 89 38 hours 89 Sydney Darwin Singapore Bangkok Calcutta Kolkata Karachi Bahrain Cairo Rome London Boeing 707 138 120 78 88 1965 5 90 30 hours 90 Sydney Singapore Calcutta Kolkata Karachi Cairo Rome London Boeing 707 320 220 87 1971 2 91 26 hours 92 Sydney Singapore Bahrain London Boeing 747 200B 356 93 94 1977 1 91 23 hours 78 Perth Bombay Mumbai London Boeing 747 200B 95 436 96 1990 1 97 24 hours 87 Sydney Singapore London Boeing 747 400 412 98 2013 1 99 23 hours 30 min 100 Sydney Dubai aka ˈThe Falcon Routeˈ 101 London Airbus A380 800 100 484 102 87 2018 0 17 hours 20 min 103 Perth London Boeing 787 9 236 104 2026 105 0 106 20 hours estimated 107 Sydney London Airbus A350 1000 238 108 Note Duration is total elapsed travel time westbound including stops Other competing Australia to United Kingdom one stop flights editWhile The Kangaroo Route is a trademarked term belonging to Qantas 4 it is often genericized by the media other operators and even Qantas themselves to refer to all flights between Australia and the United Kingdom Today Qantas remains the sole operator of The Kangaroo Route as well as the only nonstop flight between Australia and the United Kingdom British Airways continues to operate its legacy route it has served since 1935 when it was Imperial Airways 109 offering the only other direct flight from Australia to the United Kingdom Forming a competitive market there are over 20 airlines operating competing one stop flights from Australia to the United Kingdom via the Eastern Hemisphere as seen in the table below Table of other competing one stop Australia United Kingdom flights Origin in Australia Airline Intermediate Stop Transit Hub Destination in United Kingdom nbsp Adelaide Qatar Airways 110 nbsp Doha nbsp Birmingham nbsp Edinburgh nbsp London GatwickCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong Kong nbsp London HeathrowMalaysia Airlines 112 nbsp Kuala LumpurQantas 113 nbsp PerthQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong Kong nbsp ManchesterQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp Singapore nbsp Brisbane Qatar Airways 110 nbsp Doha nbsp BirminghamEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalQatar Airways 110 nbsp Doha nbsp EdinburghEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp GlasgowChina Eastern 116 117 nbsp Shanghai Pudong nbsp London GatwickEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong Kong nbsp London HeathrowChina Airlines 118 nbsp Taipei TaoyuanChina Eastern 116 117 nbsp Shanghai PudongChina Southern 119 120 nbsp GuangzhouEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalKorean Air 121 nbsp Seoul IncheonMalaysia Airlines 112 nbsp Kuala LumpurQantas 122 113 nbsp Perth nbsp SingaporeQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp London StanstedCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong Kong nbsp ManchesterEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp Newcastle nbsp Cairns Qantas 113 nbsp Perth nbsp London HeathrowSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp Manchester nbsp Canberra Qantas 113 nbsp Perth nbsp London Heathrow nbsp Darwin Qantas 113 nbsp Perth nbsp London HeathrowQantas 122 nbsp SingaporeSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp Manchester nbsp Melbourne Air India 123 nbsp New Delhi nbsp BirminghamQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalQatar Airways 110 nbsp Doha nbsp EdinburghEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp GlasgowChina Eastern 116 nbsp Shanghai Pudong nbsp London GatwickEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaAir China 124 nbsp Beijing Capital nbsp London HeathrowAir India 123 125 126 nbsp Mumbai nbsp New DelhiAsiana Airlines 127 note 1 nbsp Seoul IncheonBeijing Capital Airlines 129 nbsp QingdaoCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong KongChina Airlines 118 nbsp Taipei TaoyuanChina Eastern 116 nbsp Shanghai PudongChina Southern 119 nbsp GuangzhouEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalEtihad Airways 130 nbsp Abu DhabiMalaysia Airlines 112 nbsp Kuala LumpurQantas 122 113 nbsp Perth nbsp SingaporeQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaRoyal Brunei Airlines 131 nbsp BruneiSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeSriLankan Airlines 132 nbsp ColomboThai Airways 133 nbsp Bangkok SuvarnabhumiVietnam Airlines 134 135 nbsp Ho Chi Minh City nbsp HanoiEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp London StanstedCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong Kong nbsp ManchesterEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalEtihad Airways 130 nbsp Abu DhabiQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp Newcastle nbsp Perth Emirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp BirminghamQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaQatar Airways 110 nbsp EdinburghEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp GlasgowEmirates 115 nbsp London GatwickQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaAir Mauritius 136 nbsp Port Louis nbsp London HeathrowCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong KongEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalMalaysia Airlines 112 nbsp Kuala LumpurQantas 137 122 Non Stop nbsp SingaporeQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeVietnam Airlines 134 138 nbsp Ho Chi Minh CityEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp London StanstedCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong Kong nbsp ManchesterEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp Newcastle nbsp Sydney Air India 123 nbsp New Delhi nbsp BirminghamEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaQatar Airways 110 nbsp EdinburghEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp GlasgowChina Eastern 116 nbsp Shanghai Pudong nbsp London GatwickEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaAir China 124 nbsp Beijing Capital nbsp London HeathrowAir India 123 nbsp New DelhiAll Nippon Airways 139 nbsp Tokyo HanedaAsiana Airlines 127 nbsp Seoul IncheonBeijing Capital Airlines 129 nbsp QingdaoBritish Airways 140 nbsp SingaporeCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong KongChina Airlines 118 nbsp Taipei TaoyuanChina Eastern 116 nbsp Shanghai PudongChina Southern 119 nbsp GuangzhouEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalEtihad Airways 130 nbsp Abu DhabiJapan Airlines 141 nbsp Tokyo HanedaKorean Air 121 nbsp Seoul IncheonMalaysia Airlines 112 nbsp Kuala LumpurQantas 122 113 nbsp Perth nbsp SingaporeQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeSriLankan Airlines 132 nbsp ColomboThai Airways 133 nbsp Bangkok SuvarnabhumiTianjin Airlines 142 143 nbsp ChongqingVietnam Airlines 134 135 nbsp Ho Chi Minh City nbsp HanoiEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp London StanstedCathay Pacific 111 nbsp Hong Kong nbsp ManchesterEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai InternationalEtihad Airways 130 nbsp Abu DhabiQatar Airways 110 nbsp DohaSingapore Airlines 114 nbsp SingaporeEmirates 115 nbsp Dubai International nbsp NewcastleProject Sunrise editOn 25 August 2017 Qantas announced Project Sunrise aiming to fly non stop from the East Coast of Australia Sydney Melbourne and Brisbane to London Paris Cape Town Rio de Janeiro and New York City by 2022 and challenged Boeing and Airbus to create aircraft that can travel to such places without stopping 144 In 2019 Qantas issued a request for proposal for an aircraft with over 300 seats in four classes to be delivered from 2022 145 Both Boeing and Airbus submitted proposals in 2019 Boeing announced some delays in the B777 8 project in August 2019 after Etihad Airways dropped orders made in 2013 but the company made it clear that it remained in contention for Project Sunrise 146 On 18 20 October 2019 Qantas made a 19 hour test flight QF7879 with a Boeing 787 9 from New York to Sydney 147 The next month Qantas operated its first 19 20 hour test flight from London to Sydney using again a Boeing 787 9 148 Two months later on 13 December 2019 Qantas announced that their preferred aircraft for the project was the Airbus A350 1000 The aircraft will have an additional fuel tank and slightly increased MTOW to deliver the performance required on the Project Sunrise routes Qantas stated they were working with Airbus to order up to 12 aircraft with the final decision expected within 2020 149 On 5 May 2020 Qantas Group CEO Alan Joyce announced that Project Sunrise would be put on hold due to the impact of COVID 19 on global travel 150 Qantas would review its project at the end of 2021 towards a 2024 start of the 21 hour flights meaning a delay of one year 151 On 2 May 2022 Qantas placed a formal order for 12 Airbus A350 1000 aircraft for Project Sunrise flights to commence in late 2025 between its first two routes Sydney to London and Sydney to New York 105 152 The 238 seats will be split into 6 first class suites three abreast 52 business class suites four abreast 40 premium economy seats at 40 pitch eight abreast and 140 economy class seats at 33 pitch nine abreast 153 Qantas expects these ultra long haul flights to drive an annual earnings increase of A 400 million 261 million in the first full year with all 12 aircraft in service 154 In February 2024 Qantas announced that due to manufacturing delays which were blamed on a regulator required fuel tank redesign 155 delivery of the A350 1000 aircraft would be delayed by 6 months thus the launch of the first project Sunrise flights would be delayed until mid 2026 156 157 In literature editThe book Beyond the Blue Horizon by travel correspondent Alexander Frater documents the author s attempt to fly all the sectors on the original 1935 Imperial Qantas London Brisbane route in 1984 See also editSouthern Cross Route the Kangaroo Route s counterpart traveling via the Western Hemisphere Wallaby Route Route launched by Qantas in 1952 connecting Sydney to Johannesburg Fiesta Route Qantas route that existed from 1964 1975 connecting Sydney to London via Fiji Tahiti Acapulco Mexico City The Bahamas and Bermuda 158 159 Notes edit Service ends on 29 Feb 2024 128 References edit a b About Qantas Our Company History Constellations Span the World Qantas Archived from the original on 10 December 2007 Retrieved 10 January 2008 The Qantas Story 25 Years of Progress Longreach Leader 10 December 1947 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Gunn John 1987 Challenging Horizons Qantas 1939 1954 john gunn ISBN 978 0 7022 2017 3 a b Trade Mark Details for Trade Mark 330928 Australian Government IP Australia Retrieved 17 January 2023 Qantas statement on Virgin Atlantic Airways becoming 21st carrier on the Kangaroo Route Press release Qantas 28 November 2003 Archived from the original on 17 July 2006 London to Perth Everything you need to know about the first non stop flights from Britain to Australia The Telegraph Retrieved 30 December 2017 Qantas confirms non stop Perth UK flight The West Australian 11 December 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2023 Our Logos Qantas Retrieved 14 March 2023 a b QANTAS EMPIRE AIRWAYS CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY Cloncurry Advocate 30 May 1947 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Gunn John 1985 The Defeat of Distance Qantas 1919 1939 john gunn p 190 ISBN 978 0 7022 1707 4 Brogden Stanley ed 1949 Australian Aviation Annual p 59 Crouch Wallace 2 July 1976 None of their aircraft was missing The Sydney Morning Herald p 7 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Qantas to Celebrate Kangaroo Logo Anniversary with Retro Livery Qantas Retrieved 14 March 2023 Kangaroo Service 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from the original on 18 January 2013 Retrieved 9 September 2012 Our Asian services will no longer be a subsidiary of the Kangaroo Route they will be dedicated to connecting Australians with our region and Asian visitors to Australia Flynn David 17 April 2013 Qantas bids farewell to Frankfurt Australian Business Traveller Retrieved 26 March 2018 QANTAS AND EMIRATES TO EXTEND PARTNERSHIP Qantas News Room 31 August 2017 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Qantas Reroutes London Flights Through Singapore Qantas Travel Insider 1 September 2017 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Taylor Ellis 26 March 2019 Qantas hails successful first year of Perth London flights flightglobal com Retrieved 1 October 2019 QANTAS FLIGHTS FROM AUSTRALIA DIRECT TO ROME TAKE OFF Qantas 25 June 2022 Retrieved 25 November 2022 Qantas to fly first non stop route from Darwin to Heathrow to return stranded Brits to UK amid coronavirus crisis ITV News 25 March 2020 Retrieved 29 February 2024 O Hare Maureen 25 March 2020 Qantas A380 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the Prism of Qantas Distance Makes a Comeback PDF The Otemon Journal of Australian Studies 31 145 via i repository a b QANTAS Timetable 1959 Timetableimages com 6 November 1959 p 4 Retrieved 20 February 2023 a b QANTAS Timetable 1965 Timetableimages com 1 July 1965 p 4 Retrieved 20 February 2023 a b LondonAirTravel 1 May 2022 The History Of Flight Between The UK and Australia From 1935 Onwards London Air Travel Retrieved 1 March 2023 Shortest Air Route between London and Sydney 1955 2025 The Geography of Transport Systems 5 January 2018 Retrieved 1 March 2023 Australia and U S Seek to Protect Airlines in Dispute Over Commercial Flights The New York Times 15 August 1971 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 1 March 2023 LondonAirTravel 12 November 2020 How Qantas Boeing 747 Aircraft Transformed Flying To Australia London Air Travel Retrieved 1 March 2023 Boeing 747 200 The Encyclopedia of Aircraft David C Eyre Aeropedia Retrieved 1 March 2023 Boeing 747 200 The Encyclopedia of Aircraft David C Eyre Aeropedia Retrieved 2 March 2023 Qantas retires its very first Boeing 747 400 Executive Traveller www executivetraveller com 21 November 2014 Retrieved 1 March 2023 Creedy Steve 30 November 2007 Qantas Kangaroo route 60th birthday News com au Archived from the original on 1 December 2007 Retrieved 20 February 2023 Qantas and Emirates Partnership retrieved 2 March 2023 a b Qantas presses ahead with post Emirates European amp Asian restructure as competitors show no leniency CAPA Centre for Aviation Retrieved 1 March 2023 Qantas and Emirates announce global partnership replacing BA joint venture ch aviation Retrieved 1 March 2023 Qantas receives first reconfigured A380 Australian Aviation Retrieved 2 March 2023 QANTAS opens Perth London bookings for March 2018 launch Routes Retrieved 2 March 2023 Spotters Sebastian Polito Vuelos y 23 May 2022 Qantas resumes flights between Perth and London Aviacionline com in Spanish Retrieved 1 March 2023 a b Project Sunrise Qantas Retrieved 29 January 2024 Qantas promises direct flights from Sydney to London and New York BBC News 2 May 2022 Retrieved 1 March 2023 Qantas Flew Non stop from London to Sydney in Less Than 20 Hours qantas com 15 November 2019 Retrieved 20 February 2023 Graham Matt 2 May 2022 Qantas Reveals Ultra Long Range Airbus A350 1000 Seats Australian Frequent Flyer Retrieved 1 March 2023 LondonAirTravel 9 August 2019 A History Of Imperial Airways BOAC And British Airways In Australia London Air Travel Retrieved 29 February 2024 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Direct nonstop flights Operated by QR from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i j Direct nonstop flights Operated by CX from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d e Direct nonstop flights Operated by MH from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d e f g Direct nonstop flights Operated by QF from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Direct nonstop flights Operated by SQ from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Direct nonstop flights Operated by EK from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d e f Direct nonstop flights Operated by MU from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b China Eastern Expands Oceania Network in NW23 AeroRoutes Retrieved 31 October 2023 a b c Direct nonstop flights Operated by CI from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c Direct nonstop flights Operated by CZ from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 China Southern Resumes Brisbane Service from mid Nov 2023 AeroRoutes Retrieved 20 November 2023 a b Direct nonstop flights Operated by KE from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d e Direct nonstop flights Operated by QF from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c d Direct nonstop flights Operated by AI from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b Direct nonstop flights Operated by CA from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 Direct nonstop flights Operated by AI from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 18 December 2023 Air India Schedules Mumbai Melbourne Launch in Dec 2023 AeroRoutes Retrieved 18 December 2023 a b Direct nonstop flights Operated by OZfrom GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 Asiana Airlines Adds Seoul Melbourne Service From late Dec 2023 AeroRoutes Retrieved 27 December 2023 a b Direct nonstop flights Operated by JD from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 21 March 2023 a b c d Direct nonstop flights Operated by EY from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 Direct nonstop flights Operated by BI from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b Direct nonstop flights Operated by UL from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b Direct nonstop flights Operated by TG from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b c Direct nonstop flights Operated by VN from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 a b Direct nonstop flights Operated by VN from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 Direct nonstop flights Operated by MK from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 Direct nonstop flights Operated by QF from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 Vietnam Airlines Schedules Perth Dec 2023 Launch AeroRoutes Retrieved 11 December 2023 Direct nonstop flights Operated by NH from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 Direct nonstop flights Operated by BA from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 15 March 2023 Direct nonstop flights Operated by JL from GB AUS FlightsFrom Retrieved 26 September 2023 Flights operated by GS between UK and Australia FlightsFrom Retrieved 27 November 2023 Tianjin Airlines Adds Chongqing Sydney From late Nov 2023 AeroRoutes Retrieved 27 November 2023 New opportunities for direct routes PDF Qantas 25 August 2017 Retrieved 26 March 2018 Taylor Ellis 4 June 2018 Qantas details considerations for Project Sunrise aircraft Flightglobal Kaminski Morrow David 15 August 2019 Boeing aims to remain in Qantas Project Sunrise contest Flightglobal Qantas 19 hour test flight 19 October 2019 Experimental Qantas ultra long haul London to Sydney flight takes off edition cnn com Retrieved 15 November 2019 Qantas Update on Project Sunrise Qantas News Room 13 December 2019 Retrieved 13 December 2019 Coronavirus puts Qantas Project Sunrise on hold Executive Traveller 5 May 2020 Retrieved 5 May 2020 Lewis Harper 2 February 2021 Qantas could launch Project Sunrise flights in 2024 Flightglobal Qantas 2 May 2022 Qantas group announces major aircraft order to shape its future Press release Airbus A350 1000 Fact sheet PDF Qantas May 2022 Chua Alfred 30 May 2023 Qantas bets on Project Sunrise international network in long term earnings target Flight Global Goh Brenda Menon Praveen 23 February 2024 Airbus says Qantas A350 delivery delays due to need to redesign extra fuel tank Reuters Retrieved 29 February 2024 QANTAS GROUP PROFIT IN 1H24 SUPPORTS CONTINUED INVESTMENT IN CUSTOMERS Qantas News Room 22 February 2024 Retrieved 29 February 2024 Qantas expecting Project Sunrise delays over A350s ch aviation Retrieved 29 February 2024 LondonAirTravel 1 May 2022 The History Of Flight Between The UK and Australia From 1935 Onwards London Air Travel Retrieved 29 November 2022 Quiz Beach Boys Lyric or Qantas Route Qantas 16 April 2019 Retrieved 25 November 2022 Further reading editCalder Simon 22 March 2018 This is how the journey from Britain to Australia went from 28 days to 17 hours The Independent Retrieved 16 April 2023 Gebicki Michael 13 August 2023 Non stop flights v layovers Which is the best option Traveller Retrieved 14 August 2023 Benson Shan director 1962 The Big Boomerang Motion picture Australia Collings Productions Clip showing early Kangaroo Route development up to circa end of 1930 s Clip showing Kangaroo Route departure on 707 circa 1961 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kangaroo Route amp oldid 1215502767, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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