Heathrow cancels 60 flights and warns it may have
to axe more
Airport asks airlines including British Airways,
Virgin Atlantic and Air France to remove flights
Jasper
Jolly
@jjpjolly
Mon 11 Jul
2022 10.14 BST
Heathrow
airport cancelled more than 60 flights on Monday and warned that it may have to
ask airlines to remove more as it struggles to cope with the rebound in travel
demand after the pandemic.
The flights
were spread across Terminals 3 and 5, with British Airways, Virgin Atlantic and
Air France among the airlines affected.
“We are
expecting higher passenger numbers in Terminals 3 and 5 today than the airport
currently has capacity to serve, and so to maintain a safe operation we have
asked some airlines in Terminals 3 and 5 to remove a combined total of 61
flights from the schedule,” a spokesperson for the airport said in a statement.
“We
apologise for the impact to travel plans and we are working closely with
airlines to get affected passengers rebooked on to other flights.”
Passengers
at Heathrow and other airports including its London rival Gatwick, Birmingham
and Manchester have reported persistent problems with huge queues to pass
through security, lost hold baggage, and the regular failure to send staff to
help travellers with mobility issues – resulting in hours-long waits on empty
planes for those in wheelchairs who cannot leave without the correct equipment.
Heathrow
said on Monday 6 million passengers travelled through the airport in June – the
equivalent of 40 years of growth in just four months – and 25m in the first six
months of 2022. That compared with only 19.4 million passengers across the
whole of 2021.
“Despite
our best efforts there have been periods in recent weeks, where service levels
have not been acceptable, with long queue times, delays for passengers with
reduced mobility, bags not travelling with passengers or arriving late, and we
want to apologise to any passengers who have been affected by this,” it said in
a statement to the stock market on Monday morning.
It also
said it would “carefully assess” airlines’ cuts to summer schedules, after the
UK government pushed a “slot amnesty” to allow carriers to cancel flights
without losing their share of access rights to airports.
The
Heathrow chief executive, John Holland-Kaye, warned that it might ask airlines
to cancel more flights if it thinks the schedules are still too ambitious and
likely to add to the chaos.
“We will
review the schedule changes that airlines have submitted in response to the
government’s requirement to minimise disruption for passengers this summer and
will ask them to take further action if necessary,” he said. “We want everyone
who is travelling through Heathrow to be confident that they will have a safe
and reliable journey.”
Airports’
troubles in matching the recovery have been caused in part by their inability
to hire enough staff, after deep pay and job cuts by airports and airlines
during the pandemic. British Airways last week restored pay for its check-in
staff at Heathrow to pre-pandemic levels, averting the threat of strike action
that would have added to the disruption.
Despite
preparing for the recovery since November, Heathrow said on Monday that it
would not match pre-pandemic staffing levels until “the end of July”,
suggesting that there could be several more weeks of disruption ahead.
The chaos
at airports has prompted a blame game in the aviation industry. Willie Walsh,
the former boss of British Airways who now leads the International Air
Transport Association, a lobby group, on Sunday criticised Heathrow directly
for failing to prepare for the recovery.
“Heathrow
definitely should have prepared better,” Walsh said in an interview with the
BBC. “They were arguing that airlines should be operating at least 80% of their
slots through the summer period. They clearly did not provide sufficient
resources to deal with that level of activity, so you would have to be critical
of Heathrow.”
Philipp
Joeinig, the chief executive of Menzies Aviation, which provides check-in
services, baggage handling and refuelling for big airlines including benighted
easyJet, blamed ministers and Brexit for delays in staff receiving security
checks, which he said were adding to “a mounting crisis”.
He called
on Monday for the government to cut back security checks and allow more workers
from the EU to ease the shortages of staff, writing in the Times. He added:
“Brexit had a big negative impact, reducing the available pool of employees.”
.webp)
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