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Why was a plane too heavy for take-off at Southend Airport?

EasyJet's flight EJU7008 was too heavy for take-off at Southend Airport due to an unexpected issue with wind direction and aircraft weight.

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Editorial Team
April 19, 2026
2 min read
The direction and strength of the wind can also affect lift and Guy Gratton, a professor of aircraft test and evaluation at Cranfield University, believes this was the problem for EasyJet's flight EJU7008 from Southend. "The wind, being 50° off the runway heading, would give almost no headwind. Headwind is usually there - in England the wind is usually from the south-west, [which is] aligned with Southend's runway, which points at 230°, and helps shorten take-offs," he says. "On this occasion, it wasn't and there may as well have been almost no wind at all. This would be quite unexpected and can indeed cause problems," he adds. The problems were spotted when the safety calculations were done, the airport says. One way to overcome the problem, Gratton adds, is for the aircraft to travel further along the runway to give it time to reach the necessary thrust. At Southend Airport, however, this was not possible as although the runway was extended in 2012, it is still relatively short at 1,856m (6,089ft). By comparison, Stansted Airport's runway is 3,049m (10,003ft) and Luton Airport's is 2,162m (7,093ft). Gratton says another way to address the issue is to make the plane lighter, which usually mean passengers disembarking or removing luggage. He adds it is a "straightforward solution and it was quite right that EasyJet's dispatcher and captain would not take-off until the airplane was within limits". Jeremy Spake, who has worked in the aviation industry for 30 years and featured in Airport, a BBC programme that documented life at Heathrow Airport in the 1990s, said that "saving almost 600kg in weight might not sound much but it can be the difference in getting off the runway without issue". Gratton says what is "slightly unusual" for flight EJU7008 is that the issue "wasn't realised earlier on". "Usually, passengers will be asked [to switch flights] before they ever board. However, with the rush of an early morning tourist flight, it's perhaps not totally unexpected that this didn't occur earlier," he adds. Spake agrees, adding "managing it in the terminal before people have their bottoms on the plane is so much easier". "On the upside, if you're denied boarding, you're legally entitled to compensation, which for a flight to Malaga would be around £350. If your journey wasn't urgent that could be quite attractive," Spake says.

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