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US airports see shortest international widebody flights this August

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US airports see shortest international widebody flights this August
Policy
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Bogi Nils Bogason, President and CEO Icelandair Group | Icelandair Group

In August, the United States is expected to see around 2,400 international departures each day, with widebody aircraft accounting for about 860 of those flights, or 35 percent. While widebody planes are often associated with long-haul travel, some of the shortest international routes in the US this month will also use these large twin-aisle jets.

According to OAG data analyzed for August schedules, several airport pairs have minimum block times—measured from chocks-off to chocks-on—that are notably brief for widebody operations. The shortest such route is between Miami and Cancun, where LATAM offers a weekly Boeing 787-8 service with a minimum scheduled block time of 1 hour and 40 minutes. American Airlines also operates the route using a Boeing 777-200ER from August 1-5 but lists a slightly longer minimum block time of 1 hour and 48 minutes.

Other short international widebody flights include Miami to Punta Cana (2 hours and 30 minutes on LATAM's Boeing 787s), Miami to Bogotá (3 hours and 35 minutes on Emirates' daily Boeing 777-300ER), Los Angeles to Mexico City (3 hours and 45 minutes on Aeromexico's Boeing 787-8), Newark to San Juan (4 hours and 2 minutes on United's Boeing 767-400ER), Los Angeles to Toronto (4 hours and 40 minutes on Air Canada's Boeing 787-8), New York JFK to Mexico City (5 hours and 10 minutes on Aeromexico's Dreamliners), Boston to Keflavik (5 hours and 15 minutes on Icelandair's Boeing 767-300ER), and Los Angeles to Montreal (also at least one daily flight at exactly that duration using Air Canada’s A330-300 through August 11).

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The Miami-Bogotá route has seen various widebody operators over the past two decades. Historically, American Airlines flew the Airbus A300, Boeing 767, and Boeing 777; LATAM used both the Boeing 767 and later its Dreamliner fleet until May this year; Avianca deployed both Airbus A330s and Boeings as well. In August, only Emirates operates this segment with its first-class-equipped Boeing 777-300ERs. Since early this year, Emirates introduced four-class configurations including premium economy.

Emirates’ extension of its Miami service into Bogotá began in June last year. The airline aimed for better aircraft utilization by avoiding lengthy ground time in Florida while targeting strong demand in the point-to-point Miami-Bogotá market as well as belly freight opportunities. Transit traffic via Dubai supplements local demand.

Icelandair continues daily Boston-Keflavik services with its highest-capacity aircraft—the Boeing 767-300ER. These jets seat up to 262 passengers each. According to company plans reported by Simple Flying, these aircraft will be retired before the end of this decade as part of fleet modernization efforts. Icelandair currently uses them alongside smaller 737 MAX jets across transatlantic routes connecting Europe through its Keflavik hub.

"Icelandair" is classified as a full-service carrier based at Keflavik International Airport. The airline was founded on June 3rd, 1937, operates under IATA code FI/ICAO code ICE within Icelandair Group, led by CEO Bogi Nils Bogason.

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