Money | Boeing 777 Fuel Costs Ground Extended Flights Too pricey to keep 'flying tankers' in the air By Rob Quinn Posted Jul 8, 2008 4:52 AM CDT Copied A Cathay Pacific Airbus A340 taxis back to a gate at Vancouver International Airport , Friday, Dec. 14, 2007. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Richard Lam) Super-long flights were hailed as the future of aviation only a few years ago, but the soaring price of fuel has grounded those plans, reports the Wall Street Journal. Airlines are delaying or canceling intercontinental routes as the cost of keeping "flying tankers" in the air for over 12 hours stops making economic sense. Orders have dropped for planes like the Boeing 777 and Airbus 340, capable of making globe-spanning flights. Airline chiefs say super-long flights still have a future, but they are finding fewer passengers willing to pay big premiums for the ease of flying non-stop. Singapore Airlines is keeping the world's longest flight—18 hours from Singapore to New York—going for now, but without an economy class. Read These Next And ... 23,000 pages of Epstein files are now out. Breaking Bad creator's new show is wowing critics. Trump commuted his sentence. Now he's headed back behind bars. Teen killed his neighbor, then asked ChatGPT for help. Report an error