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Daily Record
Daily Record
Lifestyle
Tim Hanlon & Ketsuda Phoutinane

EasyJet cancelling 10,000 summer flights could cause holiday chaos for 1.5m passengers

Travellers flying with easyJet could have their plans thwarted by 10,000 flight cancellations, it has been reported.

Yesterday easyJet confirmed it would be cancelling more flights this summer due to staff shortages, flight caps at airports, and other operational issues.

These issues include air traffic control delays, staffing in ground handling and at airports, and increased times for identity checks of new recruits.

The carrier's announcement follows hundreds of cancellations in the past few months, the Mirror reported.

More travel woes are anticipated with The Telegraph reporting that the budget airline's cancellations could number in the thousands.

These cancellations are likely to hit flights to popular holiday hotspots like Spain and Greece, and they are expected to take place during July, August and September.

Problems affecting the aviation sector across Europe have already led to thousands of cancellations particularly during school holidays at Easter and the half-term period which coincided with the Jubilee bank holiday weekend.

EasyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren told reporters "I can't tell you how many flights will be impacted" as "we need to work this through".

He added: "It would be misleading for me to give any numbers today because we simply don't know."

The upcoming easyJet cancellations could number in the thousands (AFP via Getty Images)

Mr Lundgren said easyJet had planned to operate around 160,000 flights between July and September, before the cancellations were made.

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

EasyJet admitted there will be a "cost impact" from the disruption, and the amount of money it spends to operate each seat per kilometre excluding fuel will "exceed" previous guidance.

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.

"While in recent weeks the action we have taken to build in further resilience has seen us continue to operate up to 1,700 flights and carry up to a quarter of a million customers a day, the ongoing challenging operating environment has unfortunately continued to have an impact, which has resulted in cancellations.

"Coupled with airport caps, we are taking pre-emptive actions to increase resilience over the balance of summer, including a range of further flight consolidations in the affected airports, giving advance notice to customers, and we expect the vast majority to be rebooked on alternative flights within 24 hours.

"We believe this is the right action for us to take so we can deliver for all of our customers over the peak summer period in this challenging environment."

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