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Oct 29, 2025

Etihad Flight EY47 Diverts to Shannon After In-Flight Emergency

Etihad Flight EY47 Diverts to Shannon After In-Flight Emergency
Passengers on Etihad Airways flight EY47 from Abu Dhabi to Dublin faced unexpected disruption on the evening of 28 October when the Boeing 787 diverted to Shannon Airport, Ireland, for what the carrier called “operational reasons”. The jet landed safely at 19:29 GMT, where engineers and medical teams met the aircraft as a precaution.

Etihad has not disclosed the exact trigger—industry sources cite either a technical alert or a medical emergency—but confirmed that hotel accommodation and onward transport were arranged for the 260 passengers. The airline’s flight-status portal flagged the diversion within minutes, underscoring the value of real-time notification systems for corporate travel managers.

Abu Dhabi–Dublin is a key route for tech and pharmaceutical executives travelling between Ireland and the Gulf. The incident reinforces the importance of contingency planning: Irish immigration processed the travellers under a “force majeure” waiver, and many will require new outbound COVID health declarations now that their point of entry has changed.

For employers, the priority is duty-of-care. Companies with travellers on board should log the disruption, ensure expenses are covered and amend work schedules given the 12-hour knock-on delay to EY47’s return rotation.

From a regulatory perspective, the event will be reported to the Irish Aviation Authority and the UAE’s GCAA. Any findings could feed into Etihad’s rigorous safety-management system, but experts note that long-haul diversions remain statistically rare.
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