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Euronews
Euronews
Gavin Blackburn

Channel Tunnel power issue resolved but some train delays continue, Eurostar says

Trains were running again in both directions through the Channel Tunnel between continental Europe and the United Kingdom on Wednesday but problems remained after a day of travel chaos caused by power malfunctions and a broken down train.

The tunnel operator, Eurotunnel, said the 50-kilometre undersea link was back to "full capacity" after a power fault inside it was fixed overnight on Tuesday.

The short statement didn’t detail the cause of the power failure.

But Eurostar, which runs passenger trains through the tunnel, warned of continued possible delays and cancellations because of "knock-on impacts" from the severe disruptions on Tuesday.

Its website showed delays on Wednesday to London-Paris, London-Brussels and London-Amsterdam trains in both directions and some early morning cancellations.

Travellers queue for Eurostar services at St Pancras International station in London, 30 December, 2025 (Travellers queue for Eurostar services at St Pancras International station in London, 30 December, 2025)

Tuesday's hours-long interruption of cross-Channel train services and a resulting cascade of cancellations upended travellers' end-of-year holiday plans and provoked scrambles for flights and buses.

Another power malfunction on Tuesday on the UK side that Eurostar said was related to the electrical fault inside the tunnel also caused severe delays for passengers aboard three trains, Eurostar said.

It said an overhead power cable fell onto a Eurostar train from London to Paris, near the tunnel entrance, and that an effort to move the train with its passengers inside proved "very complex."

The power failure also caused severe delays to two trains to Brussels, Eurostar said.

Passenger Ghislain Planque told French broadcaster BFMTV that his Eurostar journey on Tuesday evening from London to France was meant to take just under 90 minutes but instead took around 11 hours, with passengers stuck overnight in the train that had only intermittent power.

"We were left without electricity, so with no heating, no air-conditioning, no possibility to charge phones," he said. "We were in total darkness for some of the time."

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