-
Global air chaos via Heathrow was avoidable says UK electricity transmission Chief *
National Grid boss says Heathrow had 'enough power'
Tom Symonds
BBC News correspondent
Published
24 March 2025, 03:51 GMT
The National Grid's chief executive has said Heathrow had "enough power" from other substations following Friday's fire that caused the airport to shut down.
John Pettigrew told the Financial Times, external the fire that knocked out a substation was a "unique event", but that two other substations remained operational and capable of powering the airport in west London.
Heathrow's chief executive had already said the shutdown it caused was not due to a lack of power, but was due to the time it took to switch from the damaged substation to the other two.
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander was asked whether she had full confidence in Heathrow's management. She said it was a matter for the airport's board.
The airport halted operations for 18 hours on Friday, causing thousands of flights to be cancelled and leaving passengers stranded across the globe. The incident also disrupted the supply of millions of pounds of goods that go through the airport.
The fire started in a transformer within the electrical substation in Hayes, north of Heathrow, around midnight.
The airport has emergency back-up power supplies, which use diesel generators and batteries, but these only keep crucial safety systems running, such as landing equipment and runway lights.
A separate biomass power generator also provides heat and electricity to Terminal Two.
However, the National Grid is the main source of power for Heathrow.
Mr Pettigrew told the Financial Times he couldn't remember a transformer failing to such an extent in his 30-year career in the industry.
"Losing a substation is a unique event but there were two others available. That is a level of resilience."
He added: "There was no lack of capacity from the substations. Each substation individually can provide enough power to Heathrow."
Mr Pettigrew said the two other substations illustrated the "level of resilience" in power infrastructure