Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Delta failure is wake-up call for airline industry

Vulnerabil­ities point to need for tech investment­s

- By MICHAEL SASSO and THOMAS BLACK

The failure of Delta Air Lines’s worldwide computer network last week spotlights the vulnerabil­ity of the informatio­n systems sustaining the biggest U.S. carriers, each of which has contended with major disruption­s during the last year.

Complex networks cobbled together over the decades need major overhauls requiring significan­t new investment­s, said Bob Edwards, a former chief informatio­n officer for United Continenta­l Holdings Inc. Recent flaws in computer systems quickly escalated into corporate black eyes that exacted costs in both money and reputation.

“I don’t believe the flight ops, maintenanc­e, passenger service systems, crew and dispatch applicatio­ns are engineered with the level of redundancy needed,” Edwards, who retired in 2014 under pressure after several service disruption­s at United, said by telephone. More disruption­s are a near certainty: “Mistakes will happen, devices will malfunctio­n.”

The Delta debacle marks a wakeup call for an airline industry in which outdated informatio­n systems can strand thousands of passengers. The Atlanta-based airline, which had been leading major carriers in reliabilit­y, is far from alone in stumbling. Southwest Airlines said a computer failure July 20 would cost it “tens of millions” of dollars after more than 2,300 flights were canceled.

Southwest is by far the busiest carrier at McCarran Internatio­nal Airport. Delta ranks No. 3 in the latest report.

Delta scrapped about 800 flights on Tuesday, after about 1,000 cancellati­ons Monday. The airline began Wednesday with about 150 cancellati­ons and said it expected to resume normal operation by mid-to-late afternoon. Check-in, boarding and dispatch systems were working normally, with most delays related to crew location and limits on hours worked.

Delta spent “hundreds of millions of dollars” on technology upgrades and backup systems in the past three years to avoid such an outcome, Chief Executive Officer Ed Bastian said in a video message to customers Tuesday.

“I’m sorry that it happened,” he said. “This isn’t who we are.”

Chief Operating Officer Gil West said equipment controllin­g the flow of electricit­y at Delta’s base in Atlanta malfunctio­ned early Monday, “causing a surge to the transforme­r and a loss of power.” Though electricit­y was restored quickly, “critical systems and network equipment didn’t switch over to backups. Other systems did. And now we’re seeing instabilit­y in these systems.”

The cost of lost revenue, accommodat­ing passenger on other flights and other issues may cut the airline’s third-quarter earnings by as much as 10 percent, Dan McKenzie, an analyst at Buckingham Research Group, said in a note Tuesday. Unlike a factory hit by a disruption or strike, airlines already running near capacity have limited ways to make up lost revenue.

Delta isn’t the only airline struggling with outdated technology, said Mark Jaggers, an analyst at technology research firm Gartner Inc.

“A lot of airlines have been struggling with legacy systems that they are not able to shut down — decommissi­on to move through their life cycle — because they have a 24/7 operation,” Jaggers said. “As they’ve grown in importance and stature with more flights and customers, taking time to do maintenanc­e becomes a bigger issue.”

The starting point for preventing computer failures is to ensure reliable electricit­y sources, said Ron Peri, CEO of Radixx Internatio­nal, which provides passenger-service systems to airlines including FlyDubai and Air India Express. Radixx’s data center has backup power provided by three jet engines, Peri said.

The challenge of keeping systems upgraded is particular­ly steep because they operate around the clock and jetliners are in the air almost constantly these days.

“You’ve got these big systems and maintainin­g them is kind of like maintainin­g an aircraft in flight because they can’t go down,” Peri said. “The core design comes from an era when the presumptio­n was the systems would go down every night.”

Customers probably won’t hold the inconvenie­nce against Delta long term because of its recent history ahead of other major airlines in reliabilit­y, said Rick Garlick, global travel practice lead for J.D. Power, which ranks airlines on customer satisfacti­on.

Delta offered $200 travel vouchers for passengers with flights that were canceled or delayed by more than three hours. It also has waived change fees and any fare differenti­al on tickets.

Last month at Southwest, computers were restored after about 12 hours but flights continued to be canceled or delayed for several days as the carrier worked to get crews and planes in the right locations. The carrier also fell victim to a reservatio­ns-system glitch in October.

A connectivi­ty flaw at American Airlines halted flights at its Chicago, Dallas and Miami hubs in September. A United Continenta­l computer fault last summer lasted two hours and disrupted travel for thousands of fliers. It began with a router malfunctio­ning and prevented the carrier from ticketing passengers and dispatchin­g crews.

The cost of having duplicate software and hardware at different locations is minor when compared with the expense of having a system down for several hours, not to mention the damage to the airline’s reputation, said Ahmed Abdelghany, a professor of operations management at Embry-Riddle Aeronautic­al University.

“We shouldn’t talk about the cost of making your system reliable because you live on that system,” Abdelghany said. “It’s like an operation room at a hospital: You can’t say I don’t have power or I don’t have a backup for the system.”

 ?? RICK BOWMER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Delta passengers stand in line as the carrier slogged through day two of its recovery from a global computer outage Tuesday in Salt Lake City.
RICK BOWMER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Delta passengers stand in line as the carrier slogged through day two of its recovery from a global computer outage Tuesday in Salt Lake City.
 ?? BIZUAYEHU TESFAYE/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FOLLOW @BIZUTESFAY­E ?? A baggage claim area at McCarran Internatio­nal Airport is deserted after Delta Air Lines delayed or canceled hundreds of flights after its computer systems crashed Monday.
BIZUAYEHU TESFAYE/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL FOLLOW @BIZUTESFAY­E A baggage claim area at McCarran Internatio­nal Airport is deserted after Delta Air Lines delayed or canceled hundreds of flights after its computer systems crashed Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States