Up to 300,000 passengers when Heathrow Airport is facing cancellation due to fire closure
Heathrow Airport in the UK said a fire broke out on the extinction of electricity at a nearby substation, destroying flight schedules around the world, which will be closed on Friday.
The London Fire Brigade said about 70 firefighters were in the fire in western London, which was the busiest in Europe and the world’s busiest airport, Heathrow, caused a massive power outage.
Huge orange flames and black smoke can be seen shooting into the sky from the power station at the airport about three kilometers. The London Fire Brigade said it took firefighters about seven hours to control the fire. By the early morning, the roads around the UK’s largest airport were largely abandoned, except for some passengers walking away from their luggage.
“Our fire investigators will begin investigations and we will continue to work closely with our partners to minimize
Destroy and support the community,” the fire brigade said.
Fire forced the plane to move to UK airports after 11pm local time on Thursday
and Europe, although many long-haul flights are just back to their departure points.
The cause of the fire is unclear
Heathrow Airport said the airport will handle 1,351 flights during the day and can fly up to 291,000 passengers
It was closed until midnight as it was experiencing a lot of power outages.
Heathrow Airport usually opens flights at 6 a.m. every day, due to night flight restrictions.

Tracking services show that Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris or Ireland announced the closure of Charles de Gaulle Airport.
Air France canceled eight flights to and from Heathrow Airport, while KLM said it canceled three return flights.
British Airways itself plans to land 341 flights at Heathrow Airport on Friday.
It said: “This will obviously have a significant impact on our operations and our customers and we are working as soon as possible to update their travel options for the next 24 hours and beyond.”
The cause of the fire is not yet known.
Energy Minister Ed Miliband said the “disastrous” fires prevented the work of the backup system and engineers are working to deploy a third backup mechanism.
“With any such incident, we will want to understand why this happens and any courses it provides for our infrastructure,” he told Sky News.
Airplanes are transferred around the world
Industry experts say tourism, travel and trade will be further disrupted worldwide, as flights will be cancelled or delayed due to the absence of the plane.
“Heathrow is one of the world’s major hubs,” said Ian Petchenik, spokesman for flight tracking site Flightradar24. “This will disrupt airline operations around the world.”
The fire forced the planes to move around the world.
Travel experts say the damage will go far beyond Heathrow Airport.
“Heathrow is one of the world’s major hubs,” said Flightradar24 spokesman Ian Petchenik. “This will disrupt airline operations around the world.”
The carefully orchestrated network of airlines depends on the aircraft that is at a specific location at a certain time. Dozens of airlines will have to rush to reconfigure their networks to move aircraft and crew.
“The other question is, ‘How will airlines deal with the backlog of passengers?’,” said tourism analyst Henry Harteveldt in the atmospheric research team. “It will be a few days of chaos.”
Qantas flights from Perth to Paris, New York United Airlines to Ireland and a United Airlines flight from San Francisco will take off in Washington, D.C., instead of London.
Some passengers turned to social media. Adrian Spender, who works for Tesco, UK, said in an article on X that he was on the Airbus A380, which had travelled to Heathrow Airport.
” #heathrow doesn’t know where we are going. Currently in Austria.”
Heathrow and other major airports in London have been hitting power in recent years, most recently in 2023 with automated door failures and air traffic system crashes.
Heathrow had its busiest January earlier this year, with 6.3 million passengers, up more than 5% from the same period last year. January is also the 11th consecutive month, with an average of 200,000 passengers per day, and the airport is a key contributor to transatlantic travel.