World
Europe faces prolonged flight disruptions
Lufthansa planes sit on the tarmac at Frankfurt airport April 16, 2010. A huge ash cloud from an Icelandic volcano caused further air travel chaos across Europe on Friday on a scale not seen since the September 11 attacks, leaving hundreds of thousands of passengers stranded. About 17,000 flights were expected to be cancelled on Friday due to the dangers posed by clouds of volcanic ash from Iceland, aviation officials said, with airports in Britain, France, Germany, and across Europe closed until at least Saturday. Photo/REUTERS
Posted Friday, April 16 2010 at 18:39
LONDON, Friday
Flights across much of Europe will be severely disrupted well into the weekend because of drifting ash ejected from a volcano in Iceland, officials said.
Much of the airspace across northern and western Europe has been closed and air control officials said some 17,000 flights would be cancelled on Friday. Hundreds of thousands of passengers in Europe and around the world have been affected by the disruptions.
Scientists say the volcano is still erupting but producing less ash. Europe’s intergovernmental air control agency, Eurocontrol, said it “expects around 11,000 flights to take place today in European airspace. On a normal day, we would expect 28,000.”
Of about 300 trans-Atlantic flights that would usually arrive in Europe in the morning, no more than 120 made it over, the agency said. “Forecasts suggest that the cloud of volcanic ash is continuing to move east and south-east and that the impact will continue for at least the next 24 hours,” it said in a statement.
More countries moved to close their airspace on Friday morning, joining eight which banned flights on Thursday. Britain’s air traffic control body extended its unprecedented restrictions on UK airspace until Saturday.
Exceptions allowed for Northern Ireland and western Scotland saw the first flight leave UK airspace since the ban was imposed, an Air Transat plane bound for Toronto from Glasgow. “In general, the situation is dynamic and subject to change,” said a statement issued by the National Air Traffic Service on Friday morning.
The UK, Irish Republic, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Belgium and the Netherlands closed their airspace on Thursday.
France shut down 24 airports in the north of the country, including the main hub of Paris-Charles de Gaulle, while Germany’s Berlin and Hamburg airports were also closed on Thursday evening. Frankfurt closed on Friday morning.
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Poland closed most of its airspace on Friday but kept Krakow and Rzeszow airports in the south open. Austrian officials said they would have to start closing their country’s airspace from late afternoon. Czech authorities began to impose restrictions on Friday as well, adding that a complete closure was likely to follow.
But as the volcanic ash began drifting south, Sweden began reopening its northern airspace. Officials said restrictions further south would be lifted gradually on Friday. Norway allowed some flights in the north as well. The Irish Republic also opened its airspace apart from a block off the south coast, putting Dublin, Shannon and Cork airports back into operation.
The volcano began erupting on Wednesday for the second time in a month, hurling a plume of ash 11km (seven miles) into the atmosphere. A 500m-wide fissure appeared at the top of the crater. The heat melted the surrounding ice, and witnesses said two flows of meltwater started coming off the glacier on Wednesday.
As many as 800 people were evacuated from their homes as water carried pieces of ice reportedly the size of small houses down the mountain. The last volcanic eruption beneath the glacier was on March 20. The eruption before that started in 1821 — and continued for two years.




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