Thousands of Britons stuck at airports as easyJet cancels another 80 flights

More holidaymakers caught up in travel chaos as nearly 200 flights are cancelled, Eurostar trains are delayed and roads clog up

UK holidaymakers have faced yet more travel chaos as easyJet cancelled another 80 flights on Sunday, Eurostar trains experienced further delays, and roads began to clog up with drivers returning from half-term and jubilee weekend breaks.

Tens of thousands of British travellers are estimated to be stranded at airports across Europe after close to 200 flight cancellations over the weekend.

As the four-day platinum jubilee weekend came to an end, along with the half-term holiday for most schools in England and Wales, easyJet said it had cancelled about 80 flights “due to the ongoing challenging operating environment”, affecting an estimated 12,000 people.

A handful of British Airways and Wizz Air flights to Gatwick were also cancelled on Sunday and about 3,000 passengers heading for Luton were diverted to other airports after a temporary power failure affected air traffic control systems there.

A problem with the overhead power supply for the Eurostar near Paris led to major delays and cancellations on all its services to and from the French capital and long queues outside the terminus at St Pancras station in central London. Eurostar urged passengers to postpone their journey if it was not essential.

Long queue of passengers at St Pancras
St Pancras international station was also crowded as travellers returned at the end of half-term and the jubilee bank holiday. Photograph: Dinendra Haria/LNP

The cross-Channel train service has experienced problems throughout the week, with an IT meltdown and a fatality on the track in northern France causing delayed and cancelled services.

On the roads, many of the 19 million drivers the AA had predicted would get behind the wheel over the four-day weekend began to make their journey home, putting strain on major routes.

In London, the travel woes will continue into the coming week, with 4,000 tube station staff due to walk out for 24 hours on Monday after talks aimed at avoiding a strike collapsed. Londoners have been told to avoid travelling on the tube between Monday morning and 8am on Tuesday.

Sunday’s easyJet cancellations mainly affected Gatwick airport. They come after 25 departures and 22 arrivals from the West Sussex hub were cancelled on Saturday, affecting at least 7,000 passengers.

“We are very sorry and fully understand the disruption this will have caused for our customers,” the airline said. “We are focused on getting them to their destination as soon as possible.” EasyJet said it had extended its customer service opening hours, and was helping those affected find hotel accommodation where required.

Flights from Barcelona, Nice, Madrid, Belfast, Geneva, Corfu, Faro and Glasgow were among those affected.

It caps a disastrous week for UK airports, with the half-term getaway marred by long queues, delayed takeoffs and hundreds of flight cancellations, including more than 180 from holiday firm Tui. Staff shortages, IT issues and poor weather across Europe, leading to air traffic control restrictions, have been blamed.

Airlines and airports are struggling to cope with a surge in demand after all international travel Covid restrictions were scrapped in the UK on 18 March.

Carriers laid off more than 30,000 employees in Britain over the past two years when air travel ground to a halt during lockdowns. Gatwick has 40% fewer directly employed staff than it did before the pandemic, while easyJet has shed 10% of its workers.

Earlier this week, the Ryanair boss, Michael O’Leary, called for military personnel to be brought in to help ease the disruption at airports. Airlines have also asked the government to relax its immigration rules for European citizens to help them hire staff.

However, Grant Shapps, the transport secretary, was dismissive of both suggestions on Sunday. Speaking on BBC’s Sunday Morning programme, he ruled out sending in the armed forces to help process holidaymakers and said more immigration was not the answer. “In fact, in Europe they have got exactly the same problems. If you look at the problems they are having in Amsterdam this weekend, there are problems across Europe.”

Several hubs around the world have also been hit by staff shortages and delays this week, including Dublin, Paris, LA, Toronto and Schiphol airport in Amsterdam. On Saturday the Dutch national carrier KLM cancelled all its flights from elsewhere in Europe to Schiphol to clear up a logjam of passengers. It said it was seeking to solve the issues by hiring more staff and paying higher wages.

By Sunday the long queues had died down at most UK airports, with Heathrow, Manchester and Stansted all saying they had not seen any significant issues, but there are concerns that the problems could recur in the summer holidays when demand grows again.

Shapps said it was down to airports and airlines, not the government, to solve the underlying issues by hiring and training more staff.

Sign up to the daily Business Today email or follow Guardian Business on Twitter at @BusinessDesk

Airlines UK, the industry body, suggested the state could play a bigger role: “The way to resolve this is through the working group announced last week by government, where we can sit down with ministers to consider the art of the possible in terms of practical measures that can make a difference – in particular on recruitment – as we enter the summer period.

“We have to get more people into and staying in the sector. It’s been done before – the HGV sector had similar problems recently – and we will leave no stone unturned to get the sector back to normality as quickly as possible.”

Shapps also said it was imperative that airlines did not oversell flights, which had caused some passengers to have their entire holidays cancelled, and suggested that travellers should get automatic reimbursement for cancelled foreign holidays similar to the delay repay scheme for trains.

Contributor

Julia Kollewe

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
EasyJet cancels hundreds of half-term flights from Gatwick as getaway begins
UK airports, ports and roads under pressure with Dover passengers facing long queues and motorists warned of major jams

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

27, May, 2022 @5:26 PM

Article image
BA and easyJet cancel more than 150 flights as travel chaos continues
Passengers face more delays going into extended platinum jubilee bank holiday

Joanna Partridge

01, Jun, 2022 @10:46 AM

Article image
Airline punctuality at UK airports nosedives, finds Which?
Ryanair and Easyjet delays double in five years, as Stansted named worst airport for takeoff times

Patrick Collinson

25, Aug, 2019 @11:01 PM

Article image
What is behind the disruption at UK airports?
Long check-in queues and flight cancellations come as travellers try to get away for Easter

Gwyn Topham and Rupert Jones

04, Apr, 2022 @5:29 PM

Article image
Why have flights been cancelled and will problem be fixed by summer?
Britons flying to and from holidays were affected last week, along with easyJet passengers on Monday

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

06, Jun, 2022 @6:00 PM

Article image
EasyJet ready to ramp up flights for summer holiday season
Airline’s shares rise amid optimism about return of international travel as Covid controls ease

Joanna Partridge and agency

14, Apr, 2021 @9:45 AM

Article image
British Airways ditches free meals on short-haul flights for M&S food
Economy class passengers will now have to pay for snacks, but business fliers will retain complimentary menu

Rob Davies

29, Sep, 2016 @3:22 PM

Article image
BA and easyJet cancel more flights, adding to misery for travellers
Heathrow and Gatwick cancellations a result of staff shortages because of Covid

Joanna Partridge

06, Apr, 2022 @9:19 AM

Article image
French pilots claim easyJet is risking safety by scheduling too many flights
Airline insists it makes no compromises on safety and says it has resolved issues with pilots’ union, which had written open letter

Kim Willsher in Paris and Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

15, Aug, 2017 @6:15 PM

Article image
‘Baggage mountain’ leads to Heathrow cancellations, as easyJet cuts schedule
Airline reduces services after Gatwick and Amsterdam caps, while Heathrow hit by luggage backlog

Kalyeena Makortoff and Gwyn Topham

20, Jun, 2022 @3:22 PM