From October 16,2016 Air India will give its passengers the
option of flying around the world non-stop in about 32 hours.
Air India
will become the only Indian airline to offer this facility to its
passengers.
This follows the airline re-routing its
Delhi-San Francisco non-stop flight to fly over the Pacific Ocean on its
way from India and returning through the North Atlantic airspace.
At
the moment the flight, which was started in December 2015, operates
through the North Atlantic airspace in both directions.
“The
aircraft will receive tail winds (which will help push the flight
faster to its destination) in both directions. This will help the
aircraft reach San Francisco and Delhi in the return direction 90
minutes earlier,” a senior official of the Directorate General of Civil
Aviation told newspersons.
The saving in time on the
flight will translate into a saving of about 7,000 litres of fuel in
each direction, and several crores of rupees for the Maharaja.
The
new flight routing has become possible due to certification of new
rules for aircraft operating over the Pacific Ocean which were not there
earlier, DGCA officials said.
Note
In 1947 the now
defunct US carrier Pan Am launched regular around the world flights. At
that time Pan Am flight 001 started its journey in San Francisco
touching down in Honolulu, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Delhi, Beirut, Istanbul,
Frankfurt, London and New York.
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