Failure, thought to have been caused by ‘dodgy’ flight plan by unnamed carrier, could cost airlines £100m
Business live – latest updatesUK flight disruption: your rights and what you are entitled to
EasyJet has begun the repatriation of customers stranded by Monday’s collapse of the UK’s air traffic control system, with five flights scheduled to bring customers back to Gatwick airport, as airlines estimated the failure could cost them up to £100m.
Airlines are facing costs “in the tens of millions”, according to Willie Walsh, the former chief executive of British Airways, who is now the director general of theInternational Air Transport Association, as disruption extended into the third day.
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