Kangaroo Route


The Kangaroo Route refers to air routes flown between Australia and the United Kingdom via the Eastern Hemisphere. The route by definition found its name following the unique mode of travel of the kangaroo, the long distance was achieved in hops. The term is trademarked and traditionally used by Qantas, although it is used in the media and by airline competitors.
In 2003, over 20 airlines operated the route. 15 years later, by mid-2018, only two airlines offer through flights on the Kangaroo Route: British Airways and Qantas.
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.

History

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 London to Brisbane route for passengers for a single fare £195. 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 12½ days including the rail trip between Paris and Brindisi.
BOAC/Qantas landplane flights from Hurn Airport in southern England to Sydney began in May 1945, initially via Learmonth; after an Avro Lancastrian ditched in the Indian Ocean crossing in 1946, the route shifted back to Singapore. The ABC Guide for September 1947 shows six flights a week from Sydney to England: three Lancastrians that took 77 hr 30 min to Heathrow and three flying boats that took 168 hr 55 min to Poole.

Multiple stops

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. A return fare was £585, equivalent to 130 weeks average pay. In the 1950s some Qantas flights made other stops, including Frankfurt, Zürich, Rome, Belgrade, Athens, Beirut, Tehran, Bombay, and Colombo. 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 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. In 1964 Qantas started a third route to London via Tahiti, Mexico, and the Caribbean, called the Fiesta Route. 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.

One stop flights

In 1971 Qantas added Boeing 747s, reducing the travel time and number of stops. Fares fell, opening air travel to more people with more competition. In April 1974 Qantas commenced operating a one stop service from Perth to London with only one stop in Bombay with Boeing 707s.
In 1989 Qantas set a world distance record for commercial jets when a Boeing 747-400, the City of Canberra, flew non-stop from London to Sydney in just over 20 hours. This was the only nonstop flight ever made between both cities for the next 3 decades.
Between 2003 and 2004, around 20 airlines operated services between the United Kingdom and Australia including Air China, Air India, All Nippon Airways, Asiana Airlines, British Airways, Cathay Pacific, China Airlines, China Eastern Airlines, China Southern Airlines, Emirates, Etihad Airways, EVA Air, Garuda Indonesia, Japan Airlines, Korean Air, Malaysia Airlines, Qantas, Qatar Airways, Thai Airways, Philippine Airlines, Singapore Airlines and Vietnam Airlines.
In June 2007 Gulf Air ceased operation between Sydney and Bahrain via Singapore.
Until early 2012 Air Mauritius flew Airbus A340s to Sydney and Melbourne via Mauritius, although it still operates a service from Perth.
As part of a new arrangement with Emirates, from 2013 all Qantas through services to the United Kingdom stopped in Dubai rather than their traditional Singapore stop, and said their "Asian services were no longer be a subsidiary of the 'Kangaroo Route'". A hub in the middle of a route is more effective than a hub at either end as connecting traffic more easily fills the plane.
Qantas also announced that its service to Frankfurt via Singapore would end in April 2013, leaving London as its only European destination.
After years of low demand and less popularity on Dubai services, Qantas announced in August 2017 that the Sydney-Dubai-London A380 Service will revert to a Sydney-Singapore-London service due to strong demand in the Asian market. Qantas flights on the traditional Kangaroo Route from Sydney to London reverted to a stopover in Singapore instead of Dubai on 25 March 2018. Five years after the change to fly through Dubai, Qantas uses the Airbus A380 on its new flagship route QF1/2, between Sydney and London via Singapore.

Non-stop flights

Non-stop flights from Perth to London commenced in March 2018 with Boeing 787s, 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. This route also opens up the possibility of further direct flights to Europe from Perth such as Paris and Frankfurt.
On 25 August 2017, Qantas announced "Project Sunrise", aiming to fly non-stop from the East Coast of Australia to London, Paris and New York City by 2022 and challenged Boeing and Airbus to create aircraft that can travel to such places without stopping.
Qantas will issue a request for proposal in 2019 for an over 300 seat aircraft in four classes, to be delivered from 2022.
Both Boeing and Airbus submitted proposals in 2019, but Boeing announced some delays in the B777-8 project in August 2019 after Etihad Airways has dropped its orders made in 2013. But Boeing has made it clear that it remains in contention for Project Sunrise.
On 18-20 October 2019, Qantas made a 19-hour test flight QF7879 with a Boeing 787-9 from New York to Sydney. The next month, Qantas operated its first 19-20-hour test flight from London to Sydney. Months later, on 13 December of the same year, Qantas announced that they have preferred Airbus A350-1000 as the aircraft for the project. The aircraft will have an additional fuel tank and slightly increased MTOW to deliver the performance required on the Project Sunrise routes. No orders have been placed but Qantas are working with Airbus to order up to 12 aircraft, with the final decision expected within 2020.
In late March 2020, prior to Qantas cutting all international services due to the COVID-19 pandemic, several repatriation flights, operated by Airbus A380, the world's largest passenger aircraft, routed as Sydney-Darwin-London. This was the first time an Airbus A380 flew nonstop between Europe and Oceania in history.
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.
During a webcast on 6 June discussing the tourism industry, Joyce commented "I think the business case for doing it is very strong When we are comfortable in doing it and have the financial strength to do it, we will be doing it."

In literature

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.