BREAKING NEWS: Wednesday, December 31, 2025 – Services partially resumed but major delays persist as overhead power supply failure and stuck train caused complete shutdown during busiest travel period
🚨 LATEST STATUS (NEW YEAR’S EVE – DEC 31)
Last Updated: Wednesday, December 31, 2025 at 6:00 AM GMT
CURRENT SITUATION
Service Status:
- ⚠️ PARTIAL SERVICE ONLY – One track operational
- ⚠️ MAJOR DELAYS CONTINUING – 6+ hour delays reported
- ⚠️ FIRST TRAIN CANCELLED – 6:01 AM St Pancras to Paris cancelled
- ⚠️ EUROSTAR URGES REBOOKING – “Postpone your journey to different date”
What Happened:
- Complete shutdown Tuesday, December 30
- ALL services London-Europe suspended 15+ hours
- Power supply failure + stuck LeShuttle train
- Thousands stranded during peak NYE travel
Recovery:
- Partial reopening Tuesday evening (6 PM GMT)
- Only ONE line available (normally two)
- Severe delays and cancellations continue Wednesday
- Full restoration expected overnight Wed-Thu
📊 THE CRISIS BY THE NUMBERS
Tuesday, December 30 Disruption:
- Duration: 15+ hours complete shutdown
- Trains Cancelled: 18+ services (and counting)
- Passengers Affected: Thousands (exact number not disclosed)
- Routes Suspended: ALL London-Europe connections
- London St Pancras ↔ Paris Gare du Nord
- London ↔ Brussels Midi/Zuid
- London ↔ Amsterdam Centraal
- London ↔ Rotterdam Centraal
- London ↔ Lille Europe
- London ↔ Disneyland Paris
Wednesday, December 31 Continued Impact:
- Delay Times: 6+ hours reported
- First Train: Cancelled (6:01 AM to Paris)
- Service Level: Partial (one track only)
- Additional Issues: “Further rail infrastructure problems overnight”
Annual Context:
- Eurostar 2024: Record 19.5 million passengers (up 5% from 2023)
- Peak Period: New Year travel season busiest week of year
- Channel Tunnel: One of Europe’s most critical transport links
🔧 WHAT CAUSED THE BREAKDOWN
Primary Issue: Overhead Power Supply Failure
When It Started:
- Overnight Monday-Tuesday (Dec 29-30)
- Fault developed in electrical system powering trains
- Located inside Channel Tunnel itself
Technical Details:
- Overhead wires supplying electricity to trains failed
- Affects all trains using tunnel (Eurostar + LeShuttle)
- Complex repair required inside undersea tunnel
- Work continues as of Wednesday morning
Secondary Crisis: Stuck LeShuttle Train
What Happened:
- LeShuttle train (carries vehicles) became immobilized INSIDE tunnel
- Blocked both passenger and freight traffic
- Required removal before any services could resume
What Is LeShuttle?
- Separate service from Eurostar passenger trains
- Transports cars, trucks, buses through Channel Tunnel
- Runs Folkestone (UK) ↔ Calais (France)
- Journey normally 35 minutes
- Also completely suspended Tuesday
Impact:
- Blocked tunnel access for all traffic
- Created bottleneck even after power partially restored
- Removal took several hours Tuesday afternoon
- Contributed to slow resumption of services
📍 SCENES FROM THE CHAOS
London St Pancras International: Desperation & Disappointment
The Visual:
- Crowds of passengers with suitcases surrounding information boards
- Cordon set up to control stranded travelers
- Staff handing out water bottles to waiting passengers
- Families camping on terminal floors
- Long lines at ticket counters for rebooking
What Travelers Are Saying:
“I’m disgusted, disheartened,” said Sarah Omouri, French traveler whose New Year’s London plans dashed. “It’s been maybe a year since we’ve had a vacation.”
Paris Gare du Nord: Scrambling for Alternatives
Desperate Parents Rush to Reach Baby:
Jamie and Issy Gill at Gare du Nord frantically trying to find flight back to UK:
“We’re desperate to be reunited with our baby boy after a getaway in the French capital.”
Their Solution: Flight via Birmingham on Wednesday – roundabout route adding hours and expense.
Scene at Station:
- Passengers crowding airline booking counters
- Bus company representatives overwhelmed with requests
- Hotel near station fully booked within hours
- Taxi queue stretching outside station
Amsterdam Centraal & Rotterdam: Dutch Travelers Stranded
Impact on Netherlands:
- Early morning services delayed several hours before cancellation
- No trains running to London entire day Tuesday
- Amsterdam to London route completely suspended
- Rotterdam services also cancelled
Passenger Frustration:
- Many had connecting flights from London
- Business travelers missing important meetings
- Families separated for holidays
Brussels Midi/Zuid: Last-Minute Reversals
The Confusion:
- Trains initially shown as cancelled (5:56 PM, 6:52 PM)
- Later confirmed as running
- Passengers unsure whether to go to station
- Misinformation spreading on social media
Inside the Tunnel: The Horror Story
Tim Brown’s 3+ Hour Ordeal:
LeShuttle passenger stuck inside Channel Tunnel in his car at Calais terminal:
“I’ve been stuck in my car on the train for more than three hours with no access to food or water.”
His Dogs: Traveling with dogs Rilo and Vinnie who are “hating life” stuck on train.
His Shock:
“The fact that nobody has come around offering everybody a bottle of water is what has shocked me the most. I know things happen, but surely that would be an easy way to help.”
Context:
- Hundreds of vehicles stuck on LeShuttle trains
- No access to facilities inside tunnel
- Cars can’t exit trains during stoppage
- Pet owners particularly distressed
Folkestone Terminal: 6-Hour Backup
The Traffic Jam:
- Long lines of cars approaching Folkestone terminal
- Delays up to 6 hours reported
- Passengers checking in as normal, then waiting indefinitely
- Freight trucks backing up on highways
Economic Impact:
- Supply chains disrupted
- Fresh food deliveries delayed
- Business shipments stuck
- Drivers’ hours-of-service rules violated (forced delays)
💔 PERSONAL STORIES: RUINED PLANS & DESPERATE MEASURES
John Paul & Lucy: Romance Canceled
The Dream Trip:
- Romantic river cruise in Paris planned
- Visit to Eiffel Tower
- Special New Year’s celebration
The Reality:
“We got probably about an hour down the track, maybe 40 minutes, and then they basically said the train’s got to stop, because the train ahead got a braking issue.”
The Frustration:
“They kept telling us that the driver was trying to fix the brakes on this other train and that the other trains were then backed up. There’s no clear information and, obviously, we’ve lost a lot of money, haven’t we?”
Their Loss:
- Non-refundable Paris hotel booking
- Pre-purchased river cruise tickets
- Restaurant reservations lost
- Special plans for proposal? (speculation based on “romantic getaway”)
The Gill Family: Separated from Baby
The Heartbreak:
- Parents on romantic getaway in Paris
- Baby left with family in UK
- Eurostar cancelled day they supposed to return
- Unable to see baby for New Year’s
The Scramble:
- Flight via Birmingham (indirect route)
- Extra night Paris hotel (unplanned expense)
- Stress of separation from infant
- Wednesday return instead of Tuesday
Tim Brown: Stuck with Dogs in Tunnel
The Nightmare:
- Returning UK after Christmas in Germany
- Dogs Rilo and Vinnie with him
- 3+ hours stuck in car on train
- No food, no water, no updates
- Dogs distressed in confined space
- No access to facilities for bathroom breaks
💰 PASSENGER RIGHTS & COMPENSATION
What Eurostar MUST Provide (EU Rail Passenger Rights)
✅ Free Rebooking: Change to different date at no extra charge
✅ Full Refund: Cash refund for cancelled journey
✅ E-Voucher Option: 12-month validity for future travel
✅ Choice: Passenger decides between rebooking, voucher, or refund
Time Limit: Must use exchange within 3 months of original travel date
What Eurostar Will Reimburse (If Stranded)
Eligible Expenses:
Hotel Accommodation:
- Up to £150 (~$199) per room, per night
- Must be reasonable and necessary
- Keep all receipts
Taxi/Transportation:
- Up to £50 (~$70) per journey
- Station to hotel and return
- Alternative transport to reach destination
Food and Drink:
- Up to £35 (~$47) per person, per day
- Reasonable meal costs
- Keep all receipts
Communication:
- Cost of calling people waiting for you at destination
- Phone calls to family
- Reasonable charges only
How to Claim:
- Submit receipts to Eurostar within reasonable time
- Use Eurostar claims form (available on website)
- Allow 4-6 weeks for processing
- Payment typically by bank transfer or credit
What Eurostar DOESN’T Owe
❌ Alternative Transport Costs (if announced within 100 minutes)
- If Eurostar informs you of options within 100 min of departure
- And you don’t wait for next available Eurostar
- They won’t reimburse flights, ferries, buses
❌ Compensation for Inconvenience
- No automatic payment for time wasted
- No compensation for missed events
- No payment for stress/frustration
❌ Indirect Costs
- Missed connecting flights (not Eurostar’s fault)
- Lost wages from missing work
- Concert/event tickets that couldn’t be used
- Hotel bookings at destination you couldn’t reach
EXCEPTION: If delay exceeds 60 minutes, you may be entitled to compensation under EU rules (25-50% of ticket price depending on delay length).
🛤️ WHAT IS THE CHANNEL TUNNEL?
Engineering Marvel & Critical Link
The Basics:
- Length: 50.5 km (31.4 miles)
- Location: Under English Channel (connects UK to France)
- Route: Folkestone, Kent (UK) ↔ Coquelles, Pas-de-Calais (France)
- Depth: Average 45m (148 feet) below seabed
- Opened: May 6, 1994 (30+ years old)
- Official Name: Channel Tunnel (nicknamed “Chunnel”)
How It Works:
- Three tunnels total:
- Two rail tunnels (one each direction)
- One service tunnel (maintenance, emergency access)
- Trains run on overhead electric power (the system that failed!)
- Speeds up to 160 km/h (100 mph) inside tunnel
- Journey time: 35 minutes Folkestone to Calais
Who Uses It?
Eurostar Passenger Trains:
- High-speed passenger service
- London to Paris: 2 hours 15 minutes total
- London to Brussels: 2 hours
- London to Amsterdam: 3 hours 52 minutes
- Connects major European cities
- Record 19.5 million passengers in 2024
LeShuttle (Formerly Eurotunnel Le Shuttle):
- Vehicle transport service
- Cars, motorcycles, buses, trucks, caravans
- Drive on, drive off
- 35-minute crossing
- Departs up to 4 times per hour
Freight Trains:
- Heavy goods transport UK ↔ Europe
- Critical for supply chains
- Food, consumer goods, manufacturing supplies
- Alternative to ferry freight
Economic Importance
Daily Impact:
- Thousands of passengers daily
- Hundreds of freight shipments
- Billions in trade annually
- Critical post-Brexit UK-EU link
Why This Failure Matters:
- No good alternatives during closure
- Ferry capacity limited
- Flights more expensive and time-consuming
- Demonstrates infrastructure vulnerability
📅 TIMELINE: HOW THE CRISIS UNFOLDED
Monday Night, December 29 (Overnight)
- 11:00 PM – 3:00 AM: Overhead power supply fault develops in tunnel
- Engineers begin initial assessment
- Power systems shutting down intermittently
Tuesday Morning, December 30
Early Morning (5:00-7:00 AM):
- First trains experience delays
- 6:40 AM Amsterdam to London: Delayed, then cancelled
- Multiple morning services shown as delayed
Mid-Morning (8:00-10:00 AM):
- LeShuttle train becomes stuck inside tunnel
- Situation escalates from delays to complete suspension
- Eurostar begins cancelling more services
Late Morning (10:00 AM – Noon):
- Eurostar announces complete service suspension
- “All journeys to and from London suspended until further notice”
- Passengers urged: “Please don’t come to station unless you already have a ticket”
Afternoon (Noon – 3:00 PM):
- Crowds build at St Pancras (London) and Gare du Nord (Paris)
- Alternative transport options (flights, buses) selling out
- Hotels near stations fully booked
- Social media flooded with stranded passenger stories
Mid-Afternoon (3:00-6:00 PM):
- LeShuttle services begin “gradual resumption” (~3:00 PM CET)
- 6-hour delays reported at Folkestone
- Channel Tunnel partially reopens (one track only)
- Eurostar prepares to restart limited service
Evening (6:00 PM – Midnight GMT):
- First Eurostar services resume (~6:00 PM GMT)
- Only one tunnel track operational (normally two)
- Services running in alternating directions
- Severe delays and long journey times
- Many passengers still waiting at stations
- Work continues overnight to restore full service
Wednesday Morning, December 31 (NEW YEAR’S EVE)
Early Morning (5:00-7:00 AM):
- First train St Pancras to Paris (6:01 AM) CANCELLED
- “Further issues with rail infrastructure overnight” reported
- Eurostar warns: “Due to knock-on impacts there may still be delays and possible last-minute cancellations”
Current Status (6:00 AM onwards):
- Most services showing as scheduled
- One track operational
- Delays expected throughout day
- Eurostar still urging passengers to postpone travel
- Full restoration hoped for overnight Wed-Thu
🌍 WHY TIMING MADE IT WORSE
Peak New Year Travel Period
Why This Week Is Busiest:
- Post-Christmas Returns: Families returning home after holidays
- New Year’s Positioning: People traveling to NYE celebration destinations
- School Break: Last week before students return
- Business Shutdown: Many offices closed, people taking vacation
- Winter Sports Season: Ski resort travelers heading to Alps
Booking Pressure:
- Every train at or near capacity
- Limited rebooking options
- Alternative transport (flights, ferries) also full
- Hotel availability scarce in major cities
The Eurostar Criticism Context
Recent Frustrations:
High Prices:
- Paris-London route criticized for expensive fares
- NYE period: Premium pricing in effect
- Some passengers paid £200-300+ ($265-400) per ticket
- No alternative rail provider (Eurostar monopoly since 1994)
August 2024 Electrical Fault:
- Similar power issue caused cancellations and severe delays in summer
- Questions about infrastructure maintenance and investment
- Passengers frustrated by repeated technical failures
Service Quality Concerns:
- Long check-in times (similar to airport)
- Limited luggage allowance
- Seat comfort complaints
- Customer service response during disruptions
Competition Coming?
- Richard Branson (Virgin) planning rival service
- Italy’s Trenitalia wants Paris-London route by 2029
- May break Eurostar’s 30-year monopoly
- Could improve service and lower prices
✈️ ALTERNATIVE ROUTES DURING CRISIS
For Passengers Who MUST Travel
Option 1: Flights London ↔ Paris
- Airlines: British Airways, Air France, easyJet, Ryanair
- Duration: 1 hour 15 min flight time (but add airport time)
- Total Time: 4-5 hours door-to-door (vs. 2h 15m on Eurostar)
- Cost: £100-300+ ($135-400+) depending on availability
- Issue: Limited last-minute seats, surge pricing
Option 2: Ferry + Drive
- Routes:
- Dover (UK) ↔ Calais (France): 90 minutes
- Portsmouth ↔ Caen or Cherbourg: 3-6 hours
- Newhaven ↔ Dieppe: 4 hours
- Ferry Operators: P&O Ferries, DFDS, Brittany Ferries
- Cost: £50-150+ per vehicle depending on route/time
- Issue: Weather-dependent, slower, requires car rental if don’t have vehicle
Option 3: Coach/Bus
- Operators: FlixBus, National Express, Eurolines
- Duration: 7-9 hours London to Paris
- Cost: £30-80 ($40-110)
- Issue: Very long journey, uncomfortable for some, limited availability
Option 4: Train + Ferry Combination
- London to Dover (train)
- Ferry Dover to Calais
- Calais to Paris (train)
- Duration: 6-8 hours total
- Cost: £80-150+ ($110-200+)
- Issue: Complex connections, multiple bookings
Option 5: Private Hire/Taxi
- Companies offering London-Paris taxi service
- Cost: £500-1,000+ ($665-1,330+)
- Issue: Extremely expensive, only for desperate situations
Alternative UK Rail (For Stranded Passengers)
London North Eastern Railway (LNER):
- Offered free travel to home stations for affected passengers
- “Any LNER customers who had to abandon journey in London King’s Cross able to return to home station on next available service at no additional cost”
- Applied to passengers with Eurostar tickets for Dec 30
Other UK Rail Operators:
- Similar offers from different companies
- Help passengers get back to UK homes if return Eurostar cancelled
- Won’t help get to European destinations
🔮 WHAT TO EXPECT NEXT
Wednesday, December 31 (TODAY – NEW YEAR’S EVE)
Morning:
- Partial service continuing (one track)
- Severe delays likely (6+ hours reported)
- First train cancelled (6:01 AM to Paris)
- Most other services scheduled but delays expected
Afternoon/Evening:
- Full repair work hoped to complete
- Second track restoration targeted
- NYE travelers desperate to reach destinations
- Last chance for many to make celebrations
Midnight:
- Critical time for NYE travelers
- Many may miss celebrations entirely
- Some stuck in wrong city for New Year
Thursday, January 1, 2026 (NEW YEAR’S DAY)
Expected:
- Full two-track service restored (hopeful)
- Operations back to normal
- Lower passenger volumes (people recovering from NYE)
- Reduced schedule for holiday
But:
- Eurostar website shows “trains cancelled on 01/01/2026”
- May be planned engineering work
- Or continued recovery from Dec 30 disruption
- Check before traveling
Friday-Sunday, January 2-4
Return Travel Wave:
- Major volumes as people return home
- All transport options busy
- Eurostar likely to remain fully booked
- Book early if need to travel these dates
Future Concerns
January 2026 Scheduled Disruptions:
- Jan 5-8: Trains cancelled (operational restrictions)
- Jan 9-Feb 6: Limited service (engineering works)
- Jan 17-31: Trains cancelled certain dates
- French network: Jan 26-Feb 8 (engineering works)
Long-Term Questions:
- Infrastructure investment needed?
- Competition from Virgin/Trenitalia will improve service?
- Are power failures becoming more frequent?
- Should alternative providers be allowed sooner?
📊 COMPARATIVE DISRUPTIONS: HOW BAD WAS IT?
Major Channel Tunnel Incidents (Historical Context)
1. August 2024 – Electrical Fault
- Similar power supply issue
- Severe delays and cancellations
- Less severe than Dec 30, 2025 incident
- Raised maintenance questions
2. December 30, 2025 – THIS INCIDENT ⬅️
- Severity: Complete 15+ hour shutdown
- Worst disruption since 2015 migrant crisis
- Peak holiday travel timing
- Power fault + stuck train combination
3. July-August 2015 – Migrant Crisis
- Migrants attempting to board trains/trucks
- Services suspended multiple times
- Security concerns
- Different cause (security vs. infrastructure failure)
4. November 2007 – Fire in Tunnel
- Freight train fire
- Tunnel closed 6 months (longest ever)
- No passenger injuries
- Major infrastructure repairs required
5. December 2009 – Eurostar Breakdown
- Five trains broke down in tunnel
- 2,000 passengers stranded underground
- Some stuck 16+ hours
- Cold weather caused electrical failures
Where Dec 30 Ranks:
Severity: Second-worst passenger disruption in Eurostar history (after Dec 2009 breakdown)
Timing: WORST for travel impact (NYE peak period)
Duration: 15+ hours complete shutdown (significant)
Passengers Affected: Thousands (exact number not disclosed, but substantial)
💼 ECONOMIC & TOURISM IMPACT
Immediate Financial Losses
Eurostar:
- Lost ticket revenue from cancelled services
- Compensation costs (hotels, meals, refunds)
- Reputational damage
- Potential regulatory fines
UK Tourism:
- European visitors unable to reach London for NYE
- Lost hotel, restaurant, entertainment revenue
- Retailers missing peak shopping day
Paris Tourism:
- UK visitors unable to reach Paris for NYE celebrations
- Famous Champs-Élysées celebration attendance impacted
- Hotel cancellations
- Restaurant reservation losses
Brussels & Amsterdam:
- Similar tourism revenue losses
- Business meeting cancellations
- Event attendance impacted
Business Impact
Supply Chain Disruptions:
- Fresh food deliveries delayed
- Manufacturing parts stuck
- Retail inventory affected
- Post-Christmas sale shipments delayed
Business Travel:
- Meetings cancelled or missed
- Deals potentially lost
- Professional relationships stressed
- Remote work not possible for in-person requirements
Insurance Claims:
- Travel insurance claims surge expected
- Business interruption claims
- Event cancellation claims
- Estimated millions in total claims
Long-Term Reputation
Eurostar Brand:
- Already criticized for high prices
- Now reliability concerns
- Customer trust eroded
- Competitive threat from future rivals increases
Channel Tunnel Infrastructure:
- Questions about 30-year-old system maintenance
- Investment in upgrades needed?
- Backup power systems adequate?
- Frequency of failures increasing?
🛠️ HOW TO PREPARE FOR FUTURE DISRUPTIONS
Before Booking Eurostar
✅ Buy Travel Insurance
- Look for “travel disruption” coverage
- Covers hotels, meals, alternative transport
- Typical cost: 4-8% of trip cost
- Worth it for major disruptions like this
✅ Use Credit Card with Travel Protection
- Many premium cards include trip delay insurance
- Automatic coverage when you book with card
- Reimburses hotels, meals after 6-12 hour delays
✅ Book Refundable Tickets
- More expensive but provides flexibility
- Can cancel if disruption forecast
- Peace of mind for weather-prone periods
✅ Research Alternative Routes
- Know flight options before you need them
- Understand ferry schedules and routes
- Have backup plans ready
During a Disruption
✅ Don’t Go to Station If Train Cancelled
- Eurostar explicitly requests this
- Saves you time and frustration
- Station will be overcrowded
- Rebooking easier online or by phone
✅ Check Status Every 30-60 Minutes
- Situations change rapidly
- Trains may be reinstated
- New options may open up
✅ Book Alternative Transport Immediately
- Don’t wait hoping for quick resolution
- Flights/ferries sell out fast during disruptions
- Can always cancel if Eurostar resumes
✅ Keep ALL Receipts
- Hotels, meals, taxis, alternative transport
- Need for reimbursement claims
- Take photos of receipts (backup)
✅ Contact Your Accommodation
- Hotels may waive cancellation fees given circumstances
- Some offer free rescheduling for stranded travelers
- Explain situation and ask for help
After the Disruption
✅ File Claims Promptly
- Eurostar: Within reasonable time (suggest 2-4 weeks)
- Travel Insurance: Usually 30-90 days
- Credit Card: Follow their specific timelines
✅ Organize Documentation
- Original ticket confirmation
- Cancellation notification from Eurostar
- All receipts for expenses
- Photos of crowded stations (helpful evidence)
- Timeline of events
✅ Be Persistent
- First claim may be denied
- Appeal with additional documentation
- Consumer protection laws on your side (EU)
✅ Leave Feedback
- Eurostar customer feedback
- Regulatory complaints if appropriate
- Social media (factual, not just venting)
- Help improve service for future passengers
📞 HELPFUL RESOURCES
Eurostar Information:
Website: eurostar.com
Customer Service: +44 (0)343 218 6186 (UK)
Social Media:
- Twitter/X: @Eurostar
- Facebook: /Eurostar
Live Updates:
- Train status page: eurostar.com/uk-en/travel-info/service-information/live-departures-and-arrivals
- Disruptions page: eurostar.com/uk-en/travel-info/travel-updates
Alternative Transport:
Flights:
- British Airways: ba.com
- Air France: airfrance.com
- easyJet: easyjet.com
- Ryanair: ryanair.com
Ferries:
- P&O Ferries: poferries.com
- DFDS: dfds.com
- Brittany Ferries: brittany-ferries.co.uk
Coaches:
- FlixBus: flixbus.co.uk
- National Express: nationalexpress.com
Travel Insurance Claims:
Check your policy provider’s claims process Usually require:
- Proof of disruption
- Original booking confirmation
- Receipts for additional expenses
- Completed claims form
Consumer Rights (UK):
Consumer Rights (EU):
- EU Passenger Rights: europa.eu/youreurope/citizens/travel/passenger-rights
🎯 KEY TAKEAWAYS
What Happened:
- Worst Eurostar disruption since 2009
- Complete shutdown Tuesday Dec 30 (15+ hours)
- Power failure + stuck train combination
- Thousands stranded during peak NYE travel
Current Status (Dec 31):
- Partial service resumed (one track only)
- Major delays continuing (6+ hours)
- Full restoration hoped for overnight
- Passengers urged to postpone travel if possible
Passenger Rights:
- Free rebooking or full refund
- Hotels, meals, transport reimbursed if stranded
- Keep all receipts for claims
- EU rail passenger rights apply
Lessons Learned:
- Travel insurance crucial for major trips
- Always have backup plans
- Book with credit cards offering protection
- Infrastructure vulnerability real concern
Looking Ahead:
- Competition coming (Virgin, Trenitalia by 2029)
- Infrastructure investment questions raised
- Monopoly ending may improve service
- Passengers now more aware of risks
🗣️ OFFICIAL STATEMENTS
Eurostar:
“Due to a problem with the overhead power supply in the Channel Tunnel and a subsequent failed Le Shuttle train, the Channel Tunnel is currently closed. Unfortunately, this means we have no choice but to suspend all services today until further notice. We’re very sorry for the impact the situation may have on your travel plans.”
Getlink (Tunnel Operator):
“An incident related to the power supply to trains occurred last night in part of the Channel Tunnel, affecting train and shuttle traffic… Work will carry on tonight to enable a return to normal conditions overnight.”
UK Department for Transport:
“Eurotunnel is working with operators to resume some services while repairs to overhead electrical cables in the Channel Tunnel are ongoing, however, significant disruption is likely for the remainder of the day.”
📰 RELATED ARTICLES
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Travel Planning:
Keywords: Eurostar breakdown, Channel Tunnel disruption, December 30 2025, New Year Eve travel chaos, London Paris train cancelled, overhead power failure, LeShuttle stuck, UK Europe rail, passenger rights, travel disruption
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Published by: Travel Tourister News Team Lead Author: Vinay Category: Breaking Travel News – Europe Last Updated: Wednesday, December 31, 2025 at 6:00 AM GMT Next Update: Expected 12:00 PM GMT with latest service status
🚂 FOLLOW FOR UPDATES: Services partially resumed but delays continue. Check status before traveling. Stay safe & Happy New Year! 🎉