The Chronicle

Airlines asked to cut flight numbers

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HEATHROW asked airlines to cut 10 per cent of flights at two terminals yesterday – while easyJet started cancelling thousands of summer flights.

The move by Heathrow affected around 5,000 passengers at Terminals 2 and 3 on approximat­ely 30 flights.

It comes after images emerged on Friday of a huge pile-up of passengers’ luggage.

A spokeswoma­n for Heathrow said: “We apologise unreserved­ly for the disruption passengers have faced over the course of this weekend.

“The technical issues affecting baggage systems have led to us making the decision to request airlines operating in Terminals 2 and 3 to consolidat­e their schedules on Monday, June 20.

“This will enable us to minimise ongoing impact and we ask that all passengers check with their airlines for the latest informatio­n.”

easyJet announced it is cancelling summer flights in a bid to avoid last-minute cancellati­ons and in response to caps introduced by Gatwick and Amsterdam Schiphol airports.

It said it is ‘proactivel­y consolidat­ing a number of flights across affected airports’.

The aviation sector across Europe is experienci­ng ‘operationa­l issues’ including air traffic control delays, staff shortages in ground handling and at airports, and increased times for identity checks of new recruits, easyJet said.

The airline has cancelled thousands of flights in recent months, particular­ly during school holidays at Easter and the half-term period, which coincided with the Jubilee bank holiday weekend.

Chief executive Johan Lundgren said: “I can’t tell you how many flights will be impacted”. He added: “It would be misleading for me to give any numbers today because we simply don’t know.” Mr Lundgren said easyJet had previously planned to operate around 160,000 flights between July and September.

In May, the carrier expected its capacity to be at around 97pc of 2019 levels over that three-month period, but this has been reduced to 90pc.

EasyJet admitted there will be a ‘cost impact’ from the disruption.

It said: “We believe that these capacity/ cost impacts are a one-off this summer as we would expect all parties to build greater resilience in time for 2023 peak periods.”

Mr Lundgren said: “Delivering a safe and reliable operation for our customers in this challengin­g environmen­t is easyJet’s highest priority and we are sorry that for some customers we have not been able to deliver the service they have come to expect from us.”

Mr Lundgren disputed the Government’s insistence that Brexit is not having a major impact on staff shortages in the UK’s aviation sector.

He said: “I do disagree with that because you can just look at some of our staff. We turned down 8,000 applicants from the EU.”

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 ?? ?? Piles of luggage at Heathrow Airport and, below, easyJet has cancelled thousands of flights
Piles of luggage at Heathrow Airport and, below, easyJet has cancelled thousands of flights

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