British Airways is halting flights to Beijing from Oct. 26 until November 2025, it said on Thursday without elaborating on the reason, as European carriers struggle with a ban on flying over Russian airspace.
The airline, owned by IAG, said it would continue flying daily to Shanghai and Hong Kong. It did not say whether it would introduce a new route to replace the Beijing one.
European and British carriers are unable to fly over Russian airspace, which means flying to Asia takes a few hours longer than it used to. That makes it more expensive and less appealing to customers.
→ Air China to resume nonstop flights between Shanghai and Barcelona starting in August
Traffic from China to Europe has been very slow to recover since the lifting of COVID-19 restrictions, with many flights on the route now dominated by Chinese carriers.
Virgin Atlantic also recently announced it would end its route to Shanghai in October.
Groups such as Lufthansa have said competition from Chinese carriers, which are allowed to fly over Russian airspace, has cut into their earnings.
IAG has said that it is not strongly affected as much of its core business is focused on North and South America, where bookings and demand remain strong.
Related Topics
American Airlines Elevates Lounge Experience at Miami Hub
United and Chef’s Table Elevate International Business Class Dining with 11 World-Renowned Chefs
JetBlue to Expand Flights to Cartagena, Jacksonville, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Tampa from Fort Lauderdale
Delta TechOps Becomes First North American Airline MRO with Full Capability for LEAP-1A and LEAP-1B Engines

Plataforma Informativa de Aviación Comercial con 13 años de trayectoria.