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Gatwick flights cancelled: What’s the problem and which flights are cancelled

Gatwick flights cancelled: What’s the problem and which flights are cancelled


In an unprecedented move, Gatwick Airport has ordered airlines to cancel dozens of flights because of sickness among air-traffic controllers – which is currently running at 30 per cent of the available staff.

Cancellations, diversions and delays have happened frequently this month due to staff shortage at Nats, which runs the control tower.

Aircraft movements will be capped at 800 per day at the Sussex airport, which normally has the busiest runway in the world.

Gatwick Airport says: “The daily cap will prevent last-minute cancellations and delays for passengers while Nats work through challenges driven by sickness and staffing constraints.

As the biggest airline at Gatwick, easyJet will bear the brunt of the cancellations. British Airways, Ryanair, Tui, Vueling and Wizz Air are expected to be among other carriers whose schedules will be affected.

The airlines will lose revenue and must pay for customer care, even though the cull is beyond their control.

The Independent estimates that 25,000 passengers will be notified in the next few days that their flights have been cancelled.

These are the key questions and answers.

What’s the problem that needs solving at Gatwick?

For weeks sickness among air-traffic control staff employed by Nats at the Sussex airport has intermittently triggered a slowdown in the “flow rate” of arrivals at, and departures from, the busiest runway in the world. The latest problem is an outbreak of Covid.

With fewer flights able to land, disruption quickly takes hold – with cancellations, diversions and delays increasing as the day goes on.

The economic and emotional price of such disruption is high: costing airlines hundreds of thousands of pounds in passenger care, and wrecking holiday, family and business trips.

To try to reduce the chaos caused by on-the-day cancellations, Gatwick has imposed a cap of 800 movements (arrivals and departures) per day. That is the maximum number that the airport believes can be comfortably handled given the current staffing challenges.

Gatwick has imposed a cap of 800 movements (arrivals and departures) per day

(Getty)

What impact will the cap have?

The expected movements on Tuesday and Saturday, 26 and 30 September, are 800 movements – so no cancellations are anticipated.

On other days the excess is as follows:

  • Wednesday 27 September: 29
  • Thursday 28 September: 40
  • Friday 29…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at The Independent Travel…