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What happened to Etihad A380s?

Abu Dhabi-hubbed Etihad Airways will resume using the Airbus A380 on July 25th, more than three years after being grounded. Etihad has 10 A380s, each with 498 seats and the same configuration. There are two 'The Residence' suites, nine first-class apartments, 70 business seats, and 417 economy seats.



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Etihad Airways' A380 superjumbos are finally back in the air, 40 months after the airline grounded the world's largest passenger plane due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

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The Etihad Airbus A380 will be making a comeback shortly. The airline is bringing back four Airbus A380s, and they'll fly exclusively between Abu Dhabi and London. Expect one daily frequency as of July 2023, and three daily frequencies as of November 2023. I can't wait to fly the Etihad A380 once again!

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The first of Etihad's four A380s returns to the skies from 25 July 2023, on the Abu Dhabi–London Heathrow route.

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After being grounded for over three years, Lufthansa brought back some of its Airbus A380s as of the summer of 2023. The airline is planning on progressively bringing back more of these planes, and will eventually have all eight remaining A380s back in service.

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Now that the pandemic seems under control, the great queens of the sky are making a comeback. Etihad, Emirates, Lufthansa, Qantas, British Airways and other airlines, including new start-up Global, are putting the A380 back to work.

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The first of Etihad's four Airbus A380s returns to the sky from today on the popular Abu Dhabi-London Heathrow route. Today's inaugural flight departed Abu Dhabi at 0205 hrs and landed at London Heathrow at 0645 hrs local time.

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Etihad First Officers are offered a fixed monthly pay of $7,000 (AED26,000) in addition to a flight duty allowance of $11 (AED40) per flying hour. Furthermore, First Officers are provided with meal allowances between $4 (AED12) and $7 (AED23) per hour during layovers, based on the destination.

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On 16 December 2021, Emirates received its 123rd A380, which was the 251st and last delivered by Airbus. The A380's estimated $25 billion development cost was not recouped by the time Airbus ended production.

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Airbus A380-800 Planes flown by Ryanair Ryanair DAC is an Irish ultra low-cost carrier founded in 1984.

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Welcome back, A380 The Lufthansa A380 is returning to the skies. Enjoy a special travel experience on board the A380, starting October 29 from Bangkok to Munich. As well as Bangkok, the A380 will also operate to Boston, New York and Los Angeles.

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Currently, the world's biggest international airline has on order 50 A350-900s, 30 787-9s and 115 Boeing 777Xs. The airline operates 119 A380s, 123 Boeing 777-300ERs and 10 Boeing 777-200LRs. The 777X aircraft will replace the A380s, while the A350s and 787s will eventually replace the 777s.

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A total of 251 Airbus A380s were built and delivered for civil aviation. How many A380s are still flying? As of May 2023, about 130 A380s are in service - but several airlines plan to reactivate more aircraft during the year.

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The world's most expensive private jet belongs to Prince Alwaleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia who owns an Airbus A380 with a price tag of over 500 million USD.

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For some airlines, the A380 offered too much capacity, while for Emirates, the airline can't get enough of the plane. Unfortunately for Emirates (and us passengers), the days of the Airbus A380 are numbered. Airbus stopped A380 production in 2021, as there weren't sufficient orders to keep production going.

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