A Virgin Atlantic holiday flight bound for the Caribbean was forced to make an emergency diversion to Ireland on Saturday night after one of its engines failed high over the North Atlantic Ocean.
SHANNON, IRELAND — Virgin Atlantic Flight VS165, an Airbus A330-900neo (registration G-VTOM), departed London Heathrow Airport (LHR) at 4:12 PM BST on Saturday, May 30, 2026. The widebody jet, carrying 246 passengers and 13 crew members, was operating a scheduled route to Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay, Jamaica.
The initial leg of the flight proceeded smoothly. The aircraft climbed over Ireland and reached its initial cruising altitude of 34,000 feet as it began its standard oceanic tracking across the Atlantic.
Over the Ocean
The routine flight turned critical nearly three hours into the journey. While deep into the middle of the North Atlantic crossing, the flight crew noticed a significant technical issue with the aircraft’s number 2 (right-hand) Rolls-Royce Trent 7000 engine.
Faced with a malfunctioning powerplant and hours of open water ahead, the pilots executed standard emergency procedures. They idled and ultimately shut down the problematic engine to prevent cascading damage, immediately transforming the transatlantic crossing into a single-engine operation.
Heavy Emergency Response at Shannon
Because a dual-engine aircraft operating on one engine flies with reduced performance, the pilots descended from 34,000 feet to a safer single-engine cruise altitude of 20,000 feet as they raced back toward Europe. Air traffic controllers vectored the stricken Airbus toward Shannon Airport on the west coast of Ireland, a premier emergency diversion hub for transatlantic traffic.
On the ground, emergency protocols were spun up at a massive scale:
- Airport Teams: Shannon Airport’s Fire and Rescue Service deployed multiple crash tenders along the runway.
- Local Services: The National Ambulance Service, Gardaí (Irish police), and units from the Clare County Fire and Rescue Service from Ennis and Shannon stations were rushed to the scene.
- Maritime Backup: The Irish Coast Guard was alerted, and an RNLI lifeboat from the Aran Islands was put on standby in the Atlantic as a precaution.
Flight: Virgin Atlantic VS165
Aircraft Type: Airbus A330-900neo (G-VTOM)
Route: London Heathrow (LHR) ➔ Montego Bay (MBJ)
Diversion Airport: Shannon, Ireland (SNN)
Total Time in Air: ~5 Hours
A Safe Resolution
Despite the tense buildup, the flight crew executed a flawless single-engine approach. Flight VS165 touched down safely on Shannon’s Runway 06 at 9:24 PM IST, roughly five hours after its initial departure from London.
Emergency vehicles closely pursued the aircraft down the runway as it slowed. Thermal imaging and visual inspections confirmed there was no active fire, and the plane was escorted safely to its parking stand. All passengers and crew members deplaned normally without injuries.
Virgin Atlantic subsequently made arrangements to look after the stranded travelers, with plans to dispatch a replacement aircraft to Shannon to transport the 246 passengers onward to Jamaica. Engineers are currently inspecting the G-VTOM airframe to pinpoint exactly what caused the engine to fail.

