Gatwick is the latest airport to cancel thousands of summer flights. Is yours on the list?
Gatwick
airport has slashed its summer flight capacity,
a move that will force airlines to cancel hundreds of flights. The airport will
cut the number of daily flights to 825 in July and 850 in August. It was
planning to operate around 900 flights per day. In total, thousands of flights
- roughly one in ten - will have to be scrapped. Gatwick’s chief executive
Stewart Wingate said that staffing shortages left the airport with no choice
but to instate a cap. “Airlines will have to trim back their schedules somewhat,”
said Stewart Wingate, Gatwick’s chief executive. “It is clear that during the
Jubilee week a number of companies operating at the airport struggled, in
particular because of staff shortages. “By taking decisive action now, we aim
to help the ground handlers - and also our airlines - to better match their
flying programmers with their available resources.” The move comes days after
the UK government ordered airlines to cancel flights now, rather than later, to
prevent last minute misery for travelers. Will my flight from Gatwick be
cancelled? Airlines have already been slashing their flight schedules. Easy Jet
has scrapped 40 flights per day for the rest of June and July, while British
Airways has preemptively cut 8,000 flights from its March-October schedule. The
carriers will now be forced to cut back even further. Easy Jet - the largest
carrier operating out of the airport - will be the worst impacted. However, a
spokesperson insisted that the airline “expected to be able to accommodate the
majority of customers.” It's unclear when airlines will announce the
cancellations caused by Gatwick's new flight cap. However, it’s likely that
airlines will cancel flights as early as possible - and with at least 14 days’
notice - to minimize disruption and compensation payments. If your flight is
delayed or cancelled by an airline, they must find you a new flight or fully
refund you. A passenger on a cancelled flight is entitled to a seat on the next
available flight to your destination - even if it is with a rival carrier.
Though a disruptive and difficult decision, advance cancellation may prevent
some of the chaos currently facing travellers. Over
the past few weeks, Easy Jet have been forced to make dozens of on the day
cancellations, leaving travelers stranded at airports. Why is there so much
chaos at UK airports? Queues and cancellations have become increasingly common
across Europe since the start of 2022. At the peak of the COVID pandemic,
airports and airlines made roughly 191,000 European aviation workers redundant.
Now, as travel resurges for the first time since 2019, there are not enough
staff to handle the travel influx. Air Council International - Europe's trade
body for airports - have predicted that delays are inevitable at two-thirds of
European airports this summer.
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