Friday, March 21, 2025

Heathrow flights resume after fire forced shutdown

By Aurelia Foster,  LONDON England 

Flights have resumed at Heathrow Airport and a full service is expected on Saturday following an "unprecedented" loss of power caused by nearby a substation fire.

About 200,000 passengers were affected as flights were grounded throughout Friday, with inbound planes being 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%".

The Met Police confirmed the fire was not believed to be suspicious.

The investigation will focus on the "electrical distribution equipment", the force said.

British Airways announced eight of its long-haul flights had been cleared to leave Heathrow during Friday evening and it was "urgently contacting customers to let them know".

Restrictions on overnight flights have also been temporarily lifted to help ease congestion, the Department of Transport said.

Passengers have been advised to contact their airlines for the latest updates.

Mr Woldbye said that a back-up transformer had failed meaning systems had to be closed down in accordance with safety procedures so that power supplies could be restructured from two remaining substations to restore electricity enough to power the airport.

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