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Ryanair reveals 63,000 passengers affected by ATC failure


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Ryanair has revealed around 63,000 of its passengers saw their flights cancelled during last week’s air traffic control failure which caused widespread disruption across the industry and left thousands of passengers stranded overseas.

In its August traffic update, the Irish carrier said more than 350 of its flights were cancelled on August 28 and 29 due to the air traffic control (ATC) issue.

More than a quarter of all flights to and from UK airports were cancelled on Monday August 28 as National Air Traffic Services (Nats) were unable to process flight plans automatically.

The knock-on effect continued for two more days and is said to have wrecked the travel plans of around a quarter of a million people.

Transport Secretary Mark Harper said airlines reported on Friday that ‘most customers’ affected by the air traffic control chaos have now reached their destinations (Lucy North/PA)
Transport Secretary Mark Harper said airlines reported on Friday that ‘most customers’ affected by the air traffic control chaos have now reached their destinations (Lucy North/PA)

Ryanair said the ATC failure “has still not been explained”.

Airlines have been infuriated by the incident, which came at one of the worst times of the year, with little spare capacity across the sector due to it being the end of the summer break for many schools.

Ryanair chief executive Michael O’Leary last week criticised Nats, calling the disruption “unacceptable”.

In a video message, the group’s boss described Monday as “a very difficult day” and hit out at Nats for failing to adequately explain what caused the failure and questioning why back-up systems did not kick in.

Rival easyJet’s chief executive Johan Lundgren also last week demanded that a “full independent review” is launched into the failure and said it “must not happen again”.

Nats has said an “unusual piece of data” it received forced it to switch to manual checks.

Transport Secretary Mark Harper met Nats, the Civil Aviation Authority, Border Force, airlines, airports and trade groups on Friday last week to discuss the situation.

Nats is carrying out an inquiry into what happened and will send a preliminary report to Mr Harper on Monday.

The minister said after the meeting last Friday that airlines reported “most customers” affected by the chaos have now reached their destinations.

But thousands of holidaymakers were left stranded overseas as many flights from popular destinations were full.

Ryanair’s latest traffic update showed it carried 18.9 million guests in total last month, up 11% on a year earlier.

Fellow low-cost airline Wizz Air also revealed the impact of the ATC woes last week in its August traffic update, with 35 inbound and outbound flights cancelled due to the Nats failure.

The Hungarian-based group said all other flights ran, even if with delays.

Wizz saw 6.1 million passengers fly with the firm throughout August, up 23.9% on a year ago.

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