Hundreds
of flights were delayed or cancelled on Friday Dec 12,2014 after a computer failure
at air traffic control headquarters in England closed airspace and left
passengers facing chaos.
Reported problems around the country included:
- Heathrow: Eighty-four out of about 1,300 flights cancelled but services gradually returning to normal
- Gatwick: Flights now resumed with delays of up to an hour-and-a-half after 19 earlier cancellations
- Stansted: Departures and arrivals experiencing some delays
- London City: Cancellations and delays
- Newcastle: All of Friday's departures have left after some delays
- Luton: Passengers told to expect "residual delays"
- Bristol: Delays reported but no cancellations
- Edinburgh: Experiencing some delays
- Glasgow: Some delays to arrivals and departures
- Southampton: All flights have now departed and landed after some delays
- Leeds Bradford: Flights now operational after earlier suspension
- Birmingham: Some departures are being re-routed to avoid flying through London airspace, causing some delays
- East Midlands: Departures and arrivals were delayed
- Manchester: Some delays of around an hour but no problems expected on Saturday
For a time no aircraft were able to take off and landings were delayed at some of the UK's major airports.
All
London airports were affected with some 100,000 passengers left
frustrated at Heathrow alone where 70 flights were cancelled.
The chaos followed a computer failure at
the £623million air traffic control computer centre in the Hampshire
village of Swanwick.
A glitch
lasting from 3.27pm to 4.03pm affected a main flight data computer
server at the headquarters of air traffic control company Nats.
Transport
Secretary Patrick McLoughlin said: 'Disruption on this scale is simply
unacceptable and I have asked Nats for a full explanation of this
incident.
'I
also want to know what steps will be taken to prevent this happening
again. Any disruption to our aviation system is a matter of the utmost
concern, especially at this time of year in the run up to the holiday
season.'
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