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Emirates Makes A350 History

Emirates has made history with the launch of A350-900ULR operations across its network and a series debut to Australia.

The historic moment saw the airline deploy its ultra-long-range Airbus A350-900ULR on its first flight to Adelaide Airport.

For Emirates and Adelaide, this also marks the debut of the newest Premium Economy cabins, completing the rollout across all five Australian gateways served by the airline’s aircraft as part of ongoing fleet renewal efforts.

Premium Economy has been heavily marketed by the airline in recent years. It is part of a multi-billion dollar investment to not just upgrade existing cabins to inbound aircraft cabins with new technologies but give customers more choice, whether from Premium Economy to Business, and generally higher standards.

Emirates has already been flying the A350-900 throughout 2025 and is continuing to increase the number of destinations taking delivery of the model; however, Adelaide represents a new era of use for this aircraft.

The Divisional Vice President for Australia at the Dubai-based carrier, Barry Brown, said that Adelaide not only becomes the first Australian city to welcome the A350 at the airline, but also this represents the first delivery of the long-range variant able to fly from Dubai to Adelaide without a single stop.

Adelaide has long been targeted as the first destination this model will head to. Still, it certainly will not be the last, as Emirates looks to leverage the capabilities to evolve its flying towards existing or possibly new markets that were not previously viable with its previous A380 and 777 fleet composition.

The A350-900ULR model replaces the Boeing 777-200LR, which has operated on the service as EK440/441, Emirates committing to continuing daily operations to the South Australian city.

The Emirates Airbus A350ULR

What makes the A350-900ULR different from the base model is its configuration, which was previously announced as part of efforts to welcome five units this year in this specific layout.

The A350ULR will carry fewer passengers than the A350-900 base model. While both established configurations will not see a reduction in the number of business-class seats, the airline’s premium economy cabin will increase by seven seats on the ULR.

2.7.2025 Istanbul, Turkey. Brand new Emirates Airbus A350-941 registered as “A6-EXE” landing on Runway 35R at Istanbul Airport.2.7.2025 Istanbul, Turkey. Brand new Emirates Airbus A350-941 registered as “A6-EXE” landing on Runway 35R at Istanbul Airport – Photo: MBekir (shutterstock)

However, the largest change comes at the back of the aircraft, where Emirates has committed to reducing the total number of economy class seats from 259 across the -900 to 238 on the -900ULR.

The Airbus designation for the A350ULR is not widely used worldwide; Singapore Airlines uses this type of ULR, with a modified fuel system that allows greater fuel capacity without additional tanks, whereas Emirates does not.

Outside Singapore Airlines, adoption has been minimal. Qantas, however, will soon begin flying the A350-1000ULR for Project Sunrise, but this jet benefits from more than just a configuration change to enable the extra range; it also features fuel tank adjustments.

A Busy Week For Emirates

The launch of the A350-900ULR also comes a matter of days after the Dubai-based carrier confirmed that, as of 1 January 2026, it would begin flying the regular configured A350-900 to Baghdad across all seven weekly services, thereby replacing the 777.

The announcement also arrived days after Emirates further announced its intention to begin flying the A350 to Canada from 1 February 1026, with Montréal selected as the launch city.

Airbus A350-941 Emirates A6-EXG Take-Off At Toulouse Blagnac Airport, France To Dubai International Airport – Photo: Msadamw23 (Shutterstock)

Montréal will welcome the aircraft, which will also replace the Boeing 777 on EK243/244. While February 1 has been targeted as the commencement date, the business has made it clear that it could commence earlier if deliveries arrive ahead of schedule.

These route changes show the appetite to deploy the A350 in more markets worldwide and the genuine benefits it brings to the business while freeing up higher-capacity Boeing 777s for deployment.

The flexibility and versatile nature of the A350 is something the airline has missed for some time, as the 777 and A380 were the only two fleet types featuring, while bringing truckloads of capacity, lacking in their ability to serve a wide array of markets, including secondary cities in countries, that can now change.

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