Emirates Boeing 777-200LR. Airline image.
Emirates Boeing 777-200LR. Airline image.

Emirates announces longest non-stop flight between Dubai and Auckland

Is this an effect of low oil prices? but there seems to be a spate of announcements focussed on ultra-long haul (ULH) flights. Dubai based Emirates airline has announced a new non-stop flight between Dubai in the United Arab Emirates, and Auckland, New Zealand starting March 1.

This announcement follows recent announcements by Singapore Airlines on its ULH Singapore Newark flight (15,344km), and by United Airlines on a non-stop San Francisco Singapore flight (13,593). The current longest flight in the world is from QANTAS QF8 Dallas Fort-Worth to Sydney at 13,804km, (8,578 mi, 7,454nm).

The new Auckland flight is 14,200km (8,824 mi, 7,668 nm) in great circle distance, and will take 17h15m from Auckland to Dubai. Though longer in distance than the soon to start Dubai Panama City flight (13,821km, 7,463 nmi), the Auckland flight duration is 20 minutes shorter.

EK448 will depart Dubai at 10:05 and arrive Auckland at 11:00 the next day
EK449 will depart Auckland at 21:30 and arrive Dubai at 05:45 the next day

The morning arrivals and departures ensure the new flight will connect with Emirates’ flights to a variety of destinations including India. Ex-Auckland, passengers can connect with JetStar flights, Emirates’ partner in the region.

Emirates Boeing 777-200LR. Airline image.
Emirates Boeing 777-200LR. Airline image.

The flight which will shave over three hours from the current flights will be operated by a Boeing 777-200LR aircraft with up to 266 passengers in a three class configuration. Eight first class suites, 42 lie-flat business class seats and 216 economy class seats in a ten abreast, ultra-narrow 17″ wide high density configuration.

The new flight is in addition to airline’s four existing daily flights into New Zealand. When the new flight starts Emirates will operate three daily A380 to Auckland via Australia, a daily Christchurch service with a Boeing 777-300ER, again with the ultra narrow ten abreast economy class, and the new non-stop service just announced.

About Devesh Agarwal

A electronics and automotive product management, marketing and branding expert, he was awarded a silver medal at the Lockheed Martin innovation competition 2010. He is ranked 6th on Mashable's list of aviation pros on Twitter and in addition to Bangalore Aviation, he has contributed to leading publications like Aviation Week, Conde Nast Traveller India, The Economic Times, and The Mint (a Wall Street Journal content partner). He remains a frequent flier and shares the good, the bad, and the ugly about the Indian aviation industry without fear or favour.

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3 comments

  1. 10 abreast in economy for over 17 hours can be quiet painful. considering that this ULR flight but unlike DXB-LHR or regional flights from DXB, 10 abreast can be something that can compromise pax-ex. though this is highly debatable it is still worth a thought. i would prefer SQ over any other airline from this part of the world towards EU or Asia.

  2. In this race for the longest, runs which is a technical /commercial high, the comfort & health of the economy passenger is buried! As responsible passengers, I feel, that we must vote down the airline quality and star ratings for such cases.

  3. In this race for the longest, runs which is a technical /commercial high, the comfort & health of the economy passenger is buried! As responsible passengers, I feel, that we must vote down the airline quality and star ratings for such cases.

+OK