Kuwait Times

Half of European flights face delays after computer failure

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BRUSSELS: European air travellers faced mass disruption yesterday with around half of all flights at risk of delays following a technical problem at Eurocontro­l, the agency in charge of the continent’s skies. Several of the EU’s biggest airports, including Amsterdam’s Schiphol, warned of problems and advised passengers to check on their flights because of the computer breakdown.

“Today 29,500 flights were expected in the European network. Approximat­ely half of those could have some delay as a result of the system outage,” said a statement from Eurocontro­l. The Brussels-based agency, which coordinate­s European air traffic control operators, said the cause “has been identified and action is underway to return to normal operations” but that that would not happen until “late this evening”. The breakdown comes a day after the Easter holidays when many travellers are on the move around Europe, and as commuters across France faced disruption from a massive rail strike in protest at President Emmanuel Macron’s reforms.

“We have never had anything like this before,” a Eurocontro­l spokesman said. Brussels airport said departures were limited to 10 flights an hour. The Belgian airport manages 650 flights a day, according to its website. Several airports across the continent warned of problems, with Schiphol saying that the “system failure” at Eurocontro­l could have “possible consequenc­es” for departures. Helsinki, Prague and Copenhagen airports also said traffic was facing delays. Eurocontro­l said that there had been a “failure of the Enhanced Tactical Flow Management System”, which tracks and manages traffic demand across the continent.

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