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  • Next year, Singapore Airlines plans to reopen the world’s longest non-stop airline flight.

  • Rather than going through London or Los Angeles,

  • passengers will travel in a bespoke long-range Airbus A350

  • up over the Arctic, before arriving New York 18 hours later.

  • Singapore Air has been busy buying the next generation of long route jets for the route

  • But it should take care.

  • In the long term,

  • new fuel-efficient planes could pose a serious threat to its business model.

  • Here’s why...

  • Singapore Airlines, along with Cathay Pacific, British Airways and Emirates

  • are in essence, global hub carriers.

  • Delta Airlines pioneered the model in the US in the 1950s

  • Hub and spoke networks mean you can use fewer planes

  • and have a better chance of filling them with passengers and making profits.

  • You can connect five cities in just four daily flights if one of the cities is a hub.

  • If all the connections direct, it takes ten daily flights.

  • These days, that pattern has been replicated on a global scale.

  • Half of all the passengers at Dubai airport now catch connecting flights

  • and that 30% at Singapore, Hong Kong and London Heathrow.

  • But there's a problem with such networks.

  • If you're not trying to cover as many destinations as possible,

  • you're better off just selling direct connections between the most popular cities.

  • Budget airlines Southwest and Ryanair proved this vividly in recent decades

  • by cherry picking the best routes, and using the savings to offer cheaper tickets.

  • Range limitations mean airlines have been using a more or less unchanged "hub and spoke" model

  • since the 747-400 was introduced in the late 1980s.

  • But the introduction of new versions of fuel-efficient jets,

  • like the Boeing 787, Airbus A350 and Boeing 777X,

  • offers the tantalizing opportunity

  • to offer point-to-point flying on a global scale.

  • At present, millions in Southeast Asia

  • can't fly direct to the US,

  • Australians have to change flights on route to Europe,

  • South America is off limits to almost all of East Asia.

  • If more fuel-efficient planes could make such routes viable,

  • that will open up a world of possibilities to travelers,

  • but the world's hub carriers could face a turbulent future.

Next year, Singapore Airlines plans to reopen the world’s longest non-stop airline flight.

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