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The Global Airlines A380 takes off today, from Glasgow to New York

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Well, today’s the day! Global Airlines, an airline start-up founded by travel influencer James Asquith, is finally taking to the skies.

The Global Airlines A380 will take off from Glasgow Airport at 11am today, heading to New York JFK. It will remain there until the return flight on 19th May.

(EDIT: The aircraft has successfully taken off, roughly on time, and is now on its way to JFK.)

A second flight will take place from Manchester to New York JFK from 21st to 25th May. What happens after that is not clear.

Global Airlines A380 in Glasgow

Global Airlines launched in 2023 when it announced it wanted to operate a fleet of A380s from London Gatwick to North America. It was an aggressive idea, given that many airlines are retiring A380s because they are difficult to fill and spare parts harder to source.

Initially Global Airlines wanted to launch its first transatlantic flights in the summer of 2024. This was always ambitious and, of course, never happened. Progress seemed slow, although the first aircraft did fly to Europe for a light refurbishment.

Global Airlines has now made it to the starting line.

Whilst it’s easy to pick holes in their project, the truth is that the majority of start-up airlines never even make it to their first flight. Who remembers our coverage of Hans Airways, which wanted to fly from Birmingham to India, or Fly Atlantic, which planned transatlantic services from Belfast?

Whilst there is a heck of a long way to go to turn two test flights into a regular scheduled service, the Global Airlines project is still moving.

Today’s flight will be operated by Hi Fly, the Portuguese wet lease operator contracted by Global Airlines to run its A380 services. This means that the flight crew and cabin crew will be provided by Hi Fly. Global Airlines does not have the necessary authorisations to operate its own flights – in fact, it doesn’t even authorisation to sell tickets, and had to use an agency to market the seats.

Global Airlines A380 Glasgow

Pricing came down sharply from the initial quotes. Economy tickets, originally around £780, were being sold for £380 return last week. I think First Class was offered at £2,999 at one stage. Given that you had to commit to a four day stay – no longer, no shorter, unless you wanted to come back under your own steam – it should probably have been lower.

That said, today could, actually, be a great success.

Looking at the seat maps, ticket sales appear light. In some ways this is an opportunity. It won’t cost much to go all out on Krug and caviar to impress the journalists, influencers and aviation enthusiasts who have bought tickets.

Today could, of course, also be a mess.

Global has no Plan B, I suspect. If the A380 has a mechanical issue, there is no spare aircraft and the maintenance businesses at Glasgow are unlikely to be well stocked with A380 parts. The bad publicity would be a disaster.

It’s worth noting that the aircraft is not equipped with wi-fi. IFE will be ‘streamed directly to your own devices’ which implies that the IFE screens in the cabin will not be operable, and there are no power sockets in economy. On the upside, all passengers have been invited to a three hour reception at the TWA Hotel at JFK on arrival.

(For clarity, we were not offered a media ticket. We could have bought one, but the timing was difficult given other commitments. Would we have made it work if offered a seat? Potentially, if we could have used miles for a quick return.)

We wish James and his team good luck. We know some of the people on board (Simon Calder generously provided the photographs for this article which were taken yesterday – copyright is his, for clarity) and look forward to their reports.

PS. Simon Calder is live blogging (well, until take off as there is no wi-fi!): https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/global-airlines-new-york-flight-transatlantic-airline-live-updates-b2751351.html

Comments (56)

  • Chris W says:

    You’d think they fill the plane with as many press as they possibly could!

  • Can says:

    I thought some HfPers got tickets for this. Maybe we can hear from them later on?

  • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

    “… influencers and aviation enthusiasts who have bought tickets.”

    I didn’t think influencers paid for anything and you paid them for the exposure it would get you!

    • Rob says:

      YouTube changed the game. If you can make £50k from a popular video it’s worth paying to fly.

      • John says:

        What sort of viewership do you need to make 50k

        • Lumma says:

          I’ve read before that if you can make two 40,000 view videos a month, you can make around $2000 a month, so it doesn’t take much to make a £50k video

          • ken says:

            Do you mean views or subscibers ?

            You would struggle to make $2000 of 40k views x 2 a month unless affiliate marketing or sponsorship was extremely strong (and why would it be ?).

            Probably need 10x the number of views and more content than twice a month.

            Alongside those making tens of millions, there is a gigantic tail of content creators making next to nothing

        • BP says:

          A friend had some videos which unexpectedly were popular and he was paid about £500 per 100,000 views. That was about 10 years ago so no idea of current rates.

          • Mr. AC says:

            It’s about 10x that.

          • Lumma says:

            Yeah I meant 2x 40k view videos per week. Which is roughly what I said. It’s a shame when you find a good small channel that starts chasing the algorithm and churns out the almost same video each week

      • Tariq says:

        True, but like Virgin Voyages, it’s likely to be full of people on freebies. Positive word of mouth and social marketing will be like gold to them right now. Just being talked about is probably enough…

      • Alan says:

        Lounge staff this afternoon more than suggesting the influencers hadn’t paid…

        • Rob says:

          Noel has deffo paid. The only reason Trek Trendy isn’t there is because he felt it was bad value (ie no freebie).

  • Kieran says:

    All those who laughed this off and said the A380 won’t get off the ground look very silly now (cough – majority of HfP readers).

    • Rob says:

      The plane was always able to fly! Global has simply paid Hi Fly to operate two charters. Nothing more.

    • Thomas says:

      He has nothing!!! No ticketing service, No crew, no Identity, No IFE, no catering concept, no service concept, no website, unless you call the website that has no info on at all substantial enough. As a customer, you have no idea what you are getting for your money. With the airline being years in the making, some sort of concept, identity could have been created surely?

    • r* says:

      More like the suggestion that this is a genuine flight run by global airlines looks very silly.

    • barry cutters says:

      lets see how well your comment ages……….

    • Adam says:

      I’ve worked in the airline industry for over 25 years. Lets give it a couple of years, the only thing that will be around of them then is a Netflix show on what a sham the entire operation was.

      One very simple undeniable fact is that absolutely no one has ever managed to take on some second hand A380’s and run a successful and profitable airline with them. Zero, Zilch, Nada! How is it that from the hundreds of experienced aviation executives out there, not a single one has found a way to profitably introduce used A380’s into their airline fleet but this completely inexperienced social media zeleb with a very questionable business background sees the opportunity to make it a financially viable operation. The amount of times he compares himself to Richard Branson is embarrassing. Branson used B747’s which were already a successful aircraft, no one has ever managed to successfully fly second hand A380’s and this Mr Asquith certainly wont be the one to make that happen!

      Funnily enough the only operator to date to have introduced an A380 previously used by another airline was HiFly (hence their experience) but it nearly bankrupted them and they had to get rid of it!

      • Thomas says:

        Mr Calder just announced that 170 pax are believed to have checked in. Around a third of capacity……Nice to know that the 170 walked through a balloon arch at check in, whilst given a cupcake!!! And so the revolution in passenger experience according to Global Airlines starts. With pax numbers that low all pax will have a row to themselves so his promise to end aches and pains from travel could become reality!

  • OpsGuy says:

    I suspect the sole plane will encounter a mechanical issue (go tech) at some point along the span of these two return (HiFly operated) flights. Parking the beast up at JFK over the turnarounds will eat well into any anticipated “profit” as well of course. Will be tracking on FR24. A flight of fancy perhaps. Time will tell.

  • Tariq says:

    Parking fees at JFK for 4 days can’t be cheap…

  • Paul says:

    The aircraft was parked up at Glasgow when I drove in yesterday. Not sure when it’s due to depart but at 2:15 yesterday I have never seen such queues for security at Glasgow. Access past the barriers was stopped and they had opened a holding pen at the top of the escalators in front of fast track. And this was after the EK A380 had finalised boarding. I think every single security was open but not every scanner. So if this is going out anywhere near the EK flight, and is full! It could be carnage.

  • VinZ says:

    Their website news page was last updated in May last year…. Influencers.

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