British Airways and Virgin Atlantic are typically rivals. However, today the two airlines put their differences between them as they celebrated the reopening of the United States to European travelers.
Two rivals put aside their differences today to celebrate the United States reopening to visitors from the UK and Europe. Photo: Getty ImagesToday is a huge day for the transatlantic aviation industry. For over a year and a half, airlines have been unable to fly many passengers from Europe to the United States. This all changes today as the US re-welcomes fully vaccinated travelers from Europe and the UK. The stunning double departure was captured by Twitter’s James Oates (@speedbird_uk).
A double Heathrow departure
This morning, British Airways and Virgin Atlantic operated a special double departure from London Heathrow Airport. At around 08:30, a British Airways Airbus A350 departed London Heathrow as BA1, the airline’s most prestigious flight number. For one day only, the Airbus A350 uses the flight number to fly to New York’s JFK airport.
BREAKING: British Airways and Virgin Atlantic have synchronised departures from Heathrow to celebrate the end of a travel ban, as vaccinated passengers are finally able to enter the United States from the UK after nearly two years.
Read more: https://t.co/JnZ5DZGrxu pic.twitter.com/hn6vDkdHw1
— Sky News (@SkyNews) November 8, 2021
Simultaneously, a Virgin Atlantic Airbus A350 also took to the skies from London Heathrow. VS 3 also took off from the southern runway, bound for New York’s JFK Airport. The two airlines are both racing on the world’s former most profitable route to celebrate its reopening.
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Rivals become friends
If you look through history, British Airways and Virgin Atlantic are firm rivals. You just need to look at Virgin Atlantic’s “No Way BA/AA” campaign to see this. In 2008, Virgin Atlantic added “No Way BA/AA” to one of its aircraft in protest against a transatlantic alliance between British Airways and American Airlines.
However, this isn’t the only time that the two have locked horns. Even two years ago, Britain’s number two long-haul airline was competing against BA. In 2019, Virgin Atlantic launched a campaign to become a long-and-short-haul carrier like its rival. The airline revealed plans for an extensive short-haul network, pending an expansion of London Heathrow Airport.
Friends for a day
Despite their historical differences, Virgin Atlantic and British Airways have put aside their issues for today. Rather than competing, they’re operating simultaneous flights from London Heathrow Airport to New York’s JFK Airport. While the flights departed Heathrow together, their official schedules as per Cirium’s data are,
- BA 1 – London Heathrow (LHR) 08:30 – New York (JFK) 11:15 – 07h45m
- VS 3 – London Heathrow (LHR) 09:00 – New York (JFK) 12:15 – 08h15m
Not BA’s first planned simultaneous departure
Today’s double departure of two Airbus A350-1000s isn’t the first double departure from London Heathrow that British Airways have planned. On October 8th, 2020, the British Flag carrier operated its final Boeing 747 flight from London Heathrow, ending a 50-year long era with the retirement of the Queen of the Skies.
The airline had planned that its last two Boeing 747s would depart from London Heathrow simultaneously. However, poor weather conditions meant that this couldn’t be achieved safely. Instead, the aircraft departed from the airport’s north runway one after the other.
What do you make of British Airways and Virgin Atlantic’s celebrations? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!
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