EasyJet cuts summer flights on staff shortages

    • EasyJet said it expects the airline’s capacity in the group’s current third quarter to be 87 per cent of the pre-pandemic 2019 level. The budget carrier stressed, however, that its bookings remained “strong” for the peak-demand summer months of July and August.
    • EasyJet said it expects the airline’s capacity in the group’s current third quarter to be 87 per cent of the pre-pandemic 2019 level. The budget carrier stressed, however, that its bookings remained “strong” for the peak-demand summer months of July and August. FILE PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Mon, Jun 20, 2022 · 06:06 PM

    BRITISH no-frills airline EasyJet on Monday (Jun 20) said it was reducing the number of its flights this summer, as the UK aviation sector struggles with severe staff shortages.

    Airlines and airports are struggling to recruit staff after the lifting of pandemic lockdowns, which saw the aviation sector slash thousands of posts.

    London’s Gatwick airport last week said it would reduce summer flights owing to limited resources.

    On Monday, EasyJet said it “is proactively consolidating a number of flights across affected airports”, including Gatwick.

    The carrier added that it was seeking to “build additional resilience” also amid delays to air traffic control and passport checks.

    Despite the travel chaos, EasyJet stressed that its bookings remained “strong” for the peak-demand summer months of July and August.

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    Staff shortages across the aviation sector have sparked flight delays and cancellations in recent weeks.

    “We are sorry that for some customers we have not been able to deliver the service they have come to expect from us,” said EasyJet chief executive Johan Lundgren.

    EasyJet said it expects the airline’s capacity in the group’s current third quarter to be 87 per cent of the pre-pandemic 2019 level.

    It is expected to increase to 90 per cent in the 3 months to the end of September, EasyJet’s final quarter.

    Adding to air travel disruptions in Britain, the country’s rail sector faces its biggest strike action in more than three decades this week, in a row over pay as soaring inflation erodes earnings. AFP

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