More UK travel chaos is expected on Saturday including more disruption to flights and the closure of two of the country’s busiest railway stations in London.
Thick fog has shrouded the country – wreaking havoc on festive travel plans as airports struggle to return to their normal flight schedules after Christmas.
Gatwick, Heathrow and Manchester, the UK’s three busiest airports, are among those affected by the bad weather.
Apologising for any inconvenience, a spokesperson for Gatwick Airport added: “Temporary air traffic restrictions have been put in place due to fog causing poor visibility. Some flights may be delayed throughout the day.”
In a double blow, the UK’s two busiest stations, London Liverpool Street and Paddington, are both closed due to engineering work on Saturday.
On the West Coast main line the electricity supply has failed between Watford Junction and Milton Keynes Central.
National Rail said: “Trains may be cancelled, revised or delayed by up to 40 minutes. Disruption is expected to continue until 12 noon.”
Gatwick expects more delays as thick fog causing poor visibility
A London Gatwick spokesperson said: “Temporary air traffic restrictions have been put in place due to fog causing poor visibility. Some flights may be delayed throughout the day.
“London Gatwick apologises for any inconvenience. Passengers should contact their airline for further information.”
In some areas, thick fog patches could reduce visibility down to just 100 metres overnight and into Saturday, the Met Office said.
“It’s that time of year when people are travelling around the country a lot and there are a lot of people on the roads,” Met Office meteorologist Liam Eslick said.
“There is a lot of fog covering much of England, mainly the South East and central England, but the rest of the country is seeing quite a bit of thick fog too.
“It will be pretty murky on Saturday morning and there will still be fog patches that will take a little longer to clear.”
Barney Davis28 December 2024 08:50
Diversions to different countries as fog disrupts flights
Hundreds of airline passengers are waking up where they did not expect to be after thick fog disrupted flights on Friday.
The most extreme experience was at Teesside airport in northeast England.
Of the six scheduled arrivals on Friday, two landed with delays. Two diverted to Newcastle, 38 miles away. One went to Aberdeen.
The final flight of the day, on Ryanair from Alicante in Spain, circled hoping to land but then diverted to Dublin.
At London Heathrow, a Qatar Airways Airbus A350 diverted to Paris CDG. It eventually continued to its intended destination, arriving over three hours behind schedule, with the return leg to Doha consequently delayed by several hours – meaning missed connections for many passengers.
Four London City flights went to Gatwick and one – KLM from Amsterdam – touched down in Southampton. Manchester airport did relatively well with only one diversion: Jet2 from Tenerife, which went to East Midlands.
Barney Davis28 December 2024 08:48
Rail chaos as two of London’s most used stations closed for engineering
The UK’s two busiest stations, London Liverpool Street and Paddington, are both closed due to engineering work.
On the West Coast main line, which connects London Euston with the West Midlands, northwest England, North Wales and southern Scotland, the electricity supply has failed between Watford Junction and Milton Keynes Central.
National Rail says: “Trains may be cancelled, revised or delayed by up to 40 minutes. Disruption is expected to continue until 12 noon.”
Also, there is disruption on the West Coast main line between Glasgow and Motherwell. Avanti West Coast says Do Not Travel north of Preston before 10am.
Simon Calder28 December 2024 08:43
20,000 passengers hit by flight cancellations on Friday
At least 20,000 passengers hoping to fly to, from or within the UK had their flights cancelled on Friday, as airlines struggled to keep their schedules on track in heavy fog.
The worst-affected airport was London Gatwick, where 48 departures and arrivals were grounded, half of them on easyJet.
Upwards of 40 flights were cancelled at each of London City and London Heathrow, with British Airways grounding most of them.
Manchester airports saw 22 cancellations, including six departures and arrivals serving Amsterdam on KLM. Saturday has dawned with more cancellations.
British Airways has grounded 18 services to and from European destinations, including a holiday flight to Tenerife. At London City airport, Luxair and Swiss have grounded flights to and from Luxembourg and Zurich respectively.
Under air passengers’ rights rules, the cancelling airline must provide an alternative flight on any carrier as soon as possible – though bookings are extremely heavy. Passengers must be given means and, if necessary, hotel rooms while they wait.
Simon Calder28 December 2024 08:26