Heathrow Chaos: British Airways Flight on Tarmac for 7 Hours
by Marsha Mowers
File source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:British_Airways_Boeing_787-8_G-ZBJB_no.2.jpg
The next time we complain about a delay on the tarmac, we might want to remind ourselves that at least we weren’t on board British Airways flight BA872 on July 6 at London’s Heathrow Airport.
Passengers were forced to remain on the plane for seven hours after multiple failed attempts to repair the cabin’s air conditioning system.
The flight was bound for Kraków Airport (KRK) and passengers were only allowed off the aircraft and the flight cancelled after firefighters intervened due to a “suspected toxic air event.”
The aircraft—an older Airbus A319—suffered from a faulty ventilation system caused by a repeatedly blowing fuse, which engineers attempted to fix. However, each attempt failed, leaving the cabin with stagnant, stifling, and worsening air quality
According to AviationA2Z.com, despite the escalating discomfort, passengers were not allowed to deplane or return to the terminal. British Airways provided only minimal refreshments—two small bottles of water and a breakfast bar—during the prolonged delay.
The grounded Airbus A319 had previously been involved in a serious fume event in September 2024. During that incident, pilots were forced to don oxygen masks due to noxious cabin odours while flying from London to Aberdeen before being diverted to Manchester (MAN).





