Perth Airport fuel issues, many flights cancelled/diverted

There's some interesting diversions to Geraldton. OD196 from AKL which is a 737 Max that's been in the air 8hrs 15 mins is about to land. Must almost be running on fumes?

Philippine Airlines picked up some fuel, and is now headed into PER.
 
Qantas announced in the BNE lounges this morning that if anyone was travelling to Perth and wanted to delay their trip until tomorrow, they should contact staff to collect their baggage and get rebooked.
 
Surprise for a few on this flight with a diversion to KTA.

Scheduled to take off again soon.

Seemingly a decision a few hours out given flight path.

Screenshot_20240601_135521.jpg
 

It's probably in Qantas' interests for as many people as possible to voluntarily delay their travel, since there will be a large backlog to get through whenever the fuel issue is fixed.

In the meantime, I wonder if there are any airports near Perth (and I say "near" in the relative sense) that have enough fuel supply to allow airlines to stop in for a splash & dash on their way to their actual destinations? Otherwise, airlines might have to start tankering in fuel - it's not always possible though to carry enough for the return journey.
 
QF10 diverted to Karratha, ouch.
Double ouch, there's no international processing at Karratha so I've no idea what they'll do with the passengers. Top up the tanks and fly onwards to Darwin maybe?
 
Double ouch, there's no international processing at Karratha so I've no idea what they'll do with the passengers. Top up the tanks and fly onwards to Darwin maybe?
Take fuel to do KTA-PER-MEL is all they need to do. Easy on a 787. Presumably as they've diverted, they can get the quantity they require. Not sure on crew limitations but they wouldn't have done it without a plan if required
 
Won't pretend to know how these things work, but that seems like a surprising lack of resilience for a critical airport function
If fuel lines go, then the only option is tanker - maybe if you have time to plan you can do it with limited impact, but realistically the solution is to get the fuel flowing underground again. The logistics of it are not exactly simple. Will be interesting to find out what happened (if such info is ever released). Perth being so remote compounds this issue, you can't so easily splash and dash for a top up in that part of the world.
 
but realistically the solution is to get the fuel flowing underground again.
Yes, I was thinking more along the lines of partitioning the system so it isn't all reliant on everything being operable all the time (and would allow limited fuel flow in the event of some blockage eg to half the airport) and redundancy of pump infrastructure. Clearly there's a single point of failure of some description. Then again, maybe all of that exists and it was a software issue or similar.
 
This is where lack of consumer protections bite. Virgin has said nobody is getting anything.

Airline or Airport is irreverent, let those legal and executive teams between both work out the financial arrangements. Essentially the airlines should sent any passenger compo bills to the airport.
 
This is where lack of consumer protections bite. Virgin has said nobody is getting anything.

Airline or Airport is irreverent, let those legal and executive teams between both work out the financial arrangements. Essentially the airlines should sent any passenger compo bills to the airport.
Even on EU protections I am not sure I see how an airline would be accountable for compensation in this circumstance.
 
This really raises the importance of a diversion airport for the Perth region. I wonder if Geraldton/Kalgoorlie will be making any changes in light of this to be better prepared for future situations?
 
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