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View Full Version : Changi Airport will be a Mess without the PAP


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13-12-2014, 07:10 AM
An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:

This is a result of having too many Opposition in Parliament!

If you do not want it to happen in Changi, Vote PAP!

..........

LONDON AIR TRAFFIC IN A MESS

Passengers are facing widespread flight disruption after a computer failure at the UK's air traffic control centre.

Nats said it would take time for flight schedules to return to normal after an earlier technical fault was resolved.

The flight data system at its centre in Swanwick had now been restored to "full operational capacity", the air traffic control company said.

The government said the disruption was "unacceptable" and demanded a "full explanation" of what had gone wrong.

Knock-on effects

The glitch caused problems at airports around the country - including delays at Heathrow and Gatwick, where departing flights were grounded for a time. Other UK airports reported knock-on effects.

It comes a year after a telephone failure at the Hampshire control room caused huge disruption - one of a number of technical hitches to hit the part-privatised Nation Air Traffic Services (Nats) since the centre opened in 2002.

Reported problems around the country include:

Heathrow: Seventy out of 1,300 flights cancelled but services returning to normal
Gatwick: Flights now taking off and landing with delays and more cancellations expected
Stansted: Delays but flights now departing
London City: Cancellations and delays
Luton: Passengers told to expect "residual delays"
Bristol: Delays reported but no cancellations
Edinburgh: Experiencing some delays
Glasgow: Some delays to departures
Southampton: Flights now departing
Leeds Bradford: Flights now operational after earlier suspension
Birmingham: Some departures are being re-routed to avoid flying through London airspace
East Midlands: Departures and arrivals delayed but passengers advised to turn up as normal
Nats said on Friday evening a "thorough investigation" was being carried out to "identify the root cause" of the disruption.

"Although operational restrictions applied during the failure have been lifted, it will take time for flight operations across the UK to fully recover so passengers should contact their airline for the status of their flight," it said.

"We apologise for the impact that this issue has had, and the delays and inconvenience caused."
Managing director Martin Rolfe earlier ruled both a computer hack and a power outage as possible causes.

Independent travel journalist Simon Calder said: "Tonight we have tens of thousands of people not where they want to be, extremely upset.

"And you've got aviation bosses absolutely furious that they have no liability for this terrible event but they have an immense responsibility to look after the passengers and that's going to cost them millions of pounds."

British Airways said if its customers did not want to travel from Heathrow, Gatwick or London City on Friday evening they could rebook or get a full refund.

EasyJet said it had cancelled 10 flights to and from Gatwick and would cancel a further two on Saturday.

Flight-tracking maps show Friday's disruption

Vicky Lane, a passenger on a grounded London to Dublin plane at Gatwick earlier, said: "We've been stuck on a Ryanair flight... for over an hour.

"The doors are open and we're really cold. I'm not sure when we will be leaving."
Another passenger, who was on a flight to Paris, said his plane had "circled around the Lake District for half an hour before turning back to Edinburgh".

Ed Bott told the BBC he was: "Currently sitting on the tarmac. None the wiser. Waiting for news as to what's happening."

Swanwick air traffic control centre

Swanwick controls the 200,000 square miles of airspace above England and Wales, cost £623m to build, and employs about 1,300 controllers.

But the facility, which handles 5,000 flights every 24 hours, has had a troubled history.
It opened in 2002, six years after its planned commissioning date - a delay which Nats said was due to problems with the software used to power its systems.

Almost a year after it opened, a senior air traffic controller raised concerns with the BBC about health and safety standards and complications with radio communications - which he said cut out erratically.

Technical problems and computer faults hit flights in 2008 and again last summer. And, in December 2013, problems with the internal telephone system then caused further delays.
Aviation journalist David Learmount said the IT problem would cause "major disruption" but would be resolved by Saturday.

"This impacts not just people within the UK, it impacts flights heading here from anywhere - anything heading this way will be told some of them can't be accepted, and they will have to go back to where they flew from or consider diverting to other countries," he told the BBC.
Flights going to London from Paris Charles de Gaulle airport have been delayed, and flights from Tunisia are landing at Charles de Gaulle instead of London.

Four outbound United Airlines planes have been held at the gate, but inbound flights have not been affected.

The RAF - which has its own air traffic control systems - said the UK military was unaffected.


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