Southern Cross Route


Southern Cross Route is the industry term for passenger flights from Australasia to Europe via the Western Hemisphere. The term's initiation was the 1954 Qantas flight across the Pacific, Sydney for San Francisco and Vancouver, named in honor of Sir Charles Kingsford Smith's historic 1928 flight in the aircraft Southern Cross. The Kangaroo route is its counterpart running through the Eastern Hemisphere, with many more flights. Both terms were invented by airlines when they started flying the two routes, so they have no "official" definitions; probably no airline has ever described a route from Europe to Australasia via South America as "the Southern Cross Route".
The February 1959 OAG shows three Qantas 1049Gs a week flying Melbourne to Heathrow via San Francisco in 65 hours total. No other airline had direct flights Europe to Australasia via North America until BOAC in 1967. Four airlines offer through flights on the Southern Cross Route: Air New Zealand, Air Tahiti Nui, French Bee, and Air France.
Air New Zealand operated the Auckland–Los Angeles–London Heathrow route and an Auckland-Hong Kong-London Heathrow route, making it the only airline flying both the Southern Cross Route and the Kangaroo Route. Before Air New Zealand cancelled its Hong Kong–London flight in March 2013 in favour of a codeshare with Cathay Pacific it was the only airline still operating round-the-world service. However, Air New Zealand announced in October 2019 that it will permanently stop serving flights between London and Los Angeles, putting an end to its Southern Cross Route. The airline is still expected to continue its co-sharing agreements with its Star Alliance partner United Airlines. Air Tahiti Nui and Air France both operate a Tahiti–Los Angeles–Paris-CDG route. French Bee also operates from mainland France to French Polynesia, routing as ORY-SFO-PPT. French Bee is the first and only low cost carrier to fly the Southern Cross route.
Several other airlines have route networks extending across the Pacific and Atlantic, but none of them currently offer through flights from Europe to Australia. Air Canada flies to Sydney and Brisbane from Vancouver using the airline's new Boeing 777 and 787 aircraft. Air Canada has flown to Melbourne with its seasonal service from 3 December 2017 to 4 February 2018, however, they will return with a year-round service by 3 June 2018. Connecting flights are available on Air Canada to London Heathrow Airport, Frankfurt and with Star Alliance partner Lufthansa to Frankfurt and Munich.
LAN Airlines operates service from Europe via Santiago to a host of South Pacific destinations, including Sydney and Auckland.
In the past, additional services were offered along this route. Air Tahiti Nui briefly operated a Tahiti–New York JFK–Paris-CDG route, but it was quickly discontinued. Qantas once operated flights on this route along with the Kangaroo route, but it dropped the transatlantic flight in 1974–75 and no airline had direct flights until Air New Zealand started in the 1980s. Aerolíneas Argentinas also operated from Rome, Madrid, or Barcelona to Auckland and Sydney via Buenos Aires until 2013.

Operations

Aside from codeshares and alliances/partners, airlines on the Southern Cross Route are:
AirlineDestination in OceaniaIntermediate StopDestination in Europe
Air CanadaMelbourne, Sydney, BrisbaneVancouverFrankfurt, London-Heathrow, Paris-CDG, Zurich
Air FrancePapeeteLos AngelesParis-CDG
Air New ZealandAuckland, RarotongaLos AngelesLondon-Heathrow
American AirlinesSydney, Auckland, ChristchurchLos AngelesLondon-Heathrow
American AirlinesSydney, Auckland, ChristchurchDallas/Fort Worth Amsterdam, Dublin, Frankfurt, London-Heathrow, Madrid, Munich, Paris-CDG, Rome
Delta Air LinesSydneyLos AngelesAmsterdam, Paris-CDG
Air Tahiti NuiPapeeteLos AngelesParis-CDG
French BeePapeeteSan FranciscoParis-Orly
LATAM ChileAuckland, Melbourne, Sydney
SantiagoFrankfurt, Madrid
United AirlinesAuckland, Melbourne, Sydney, PapeeteLos Angeles London-Heathrow
United AirlinesAuckland, Melbourne, Sydney, PapeeteSan FranciscoAmsterdam, Dublin, Frankfurt, London-Heathrow, Munich, Paris-CDG, Zurich
United AirlinesAuckland, Melbourne, Sydney, PapeeteHouston-Intercontinental Amsterdam, Frankfurt, London-Heathrow, Munich, Paris-CDG