Business Standard

Flights delayed as booking system fails

- AGENCIES

Airlines worldwide were forced to delay flights on Thursday as a global flightb-ookings system operated by Amadeus IT Group SA suffered what the company called a “network issue”.

Carriers including British Airways, Deutsche Lufthansa, Cathay Pacific Airways and Qantas Airways were among those impacted, with Dutch operator KLM delaying at least 24 departures. Singapore’s Changi airport said via Twitter that a technical problem affecting some operators was holding up the checkin process, with boarding passes having to be issued manually.

“Amadeus confirms that, during the morning, we experience­d a network issue that caused disruption to some of our systems,” the Madridbase­d company said in a statement. Some airlines reported that they were affected by the glitch for a matter of minutes, though it was 3 1/2 hours before Amadeus was able to say that the network was “functionin­g normally.”

More than 130 airlines worldwide use Amadeus’s Altea passenger-service system, which helps manage flight reservatio­ns, inventory and departure-control capabiliti­es, according to its website.

A similar incident occurred in April, when computer issues briefly prevented airlines including Lufthansa and Air France-KLM, from boarding passengers. Frankfurt airport operator Fraport said on Twitter that Germany’s largest carrier Lufthansa and partner airlines had been hit by a problem for around 30 minutes in the morning which prevented bags being checked in, but the issue was resolved.

Amadeus has its strongest market position in Europe, and the meltdown appears to have had less of an impact in the North America. Southwest Airlines said there had been widespread intermitte­nt issues concerning its flights at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, but no major disruption.

The technology company declined to comment on the extent of the disruption. Dublin airport said its systems were down for 12 minutes, while Manchester in northern England reported a 15- minute failure. The knock-on effect on flights would have lasted considerab­ly longer, based on previous outages.

Thursday’s hiccup comes four months after a power loss and computer crash at IAG SA’s British Airways led to the grounding of flights for more than 75,000 passengers. The three-day blackout and cost the carrier ^65 million ($77 million) in compensati­on for those affected.

Airlines may need to review their booking mechanisms at a structural level given the recent issues, according to Bill Curtis, chief scientist at software-systems analyst CAST, who said such networks are often “patchwork quilts of code fragments” from different companies, making flaws tough to track.

Amadeus competes with Sabre Corp. and Travelport Worldwide Ltd. in booking systems, with the Spanish company claiming a 43 percent market share.

 ?? PHOTO: ISTOCK ?? British Airways, Deutsche Lufthansa, Cathay Pacific Airways and Qantas Airways were among those impacted, with Dutch operator KLM delaying at least 24 departures
PHOTO: ISTOCK British Airways, Deutsche Lufthansa, Cathay Pacific Airways and Qantas Airways were among those impacted, with Dutch operator KLM delaying at least 24 departures

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