Emirates Blasts Heathrow Airport for Mishandling its Flights
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Ground Handling at Heathrow is Problem
Area
It is therefore highly regrettable that LHR last evening gave
us 36 hours to comply with capacity cuts, of a figure that appears to be plucked
from thin air. Their communications not only dictated the specific flights on which
we should throw out paying passengers, but also threatened legal action for non-compliance.
This is entirely unreasonable and unacceptable, and we reject
these demands.
At London Heathrow Airport (LHR), our ground handling and
catering – run by dnata, part of the Emirates Group -
are fully ready and capable of handling our flights. So the crux of the issue lies
with the central services and systems which are the responsibility of the airport
operator.
Emirates is a key and steadfast operator at LHR, having reinstated
6 daily A380 flights since October 2021. From our past 10 months of regularly high
seat loads, our operational requirements cannot be a surprise to the airport.
Now, with blatant disregard for consumers, they wish to force
Emirates to deny seats to tens of thousands of travellers
who have paid for, and booked months ahead, their long-awaited package holidays
or trips to see their loved ones. And this, during the super peak period with the
upcoming UK holidays, and at a time when many people are desperate to travel after
2 years of pandemic restrictions.
Emirates believes in doing the right thing by our customers.
However, re-booking the sheer numbers of potentially impacted passengers is impossible
with all flights running full for the next weeks, including at other London airports
and on other airlines. Adding to the complexity, 70% of our customers from LHR are
headed beyond Dubai to see loved ones in far flung destinations, and it will be
impossible to find them new onward connections at short notice.
Moving some of our passenger operations to other UK airports
at such short notice is also not realistic. Ensuring ground readiness to handle
and turnaround a wide body long-haul aircraft with 500 passengers onboard is not
as simple as finding a parking spot at a mall.
The bottom line is, the LHR management team are cavalier about
travellers and their airline customers. All the signals
of a strong travel rebound were there, and for months, Emirates has been publicly
vocal about the matter. We planned ahead
to get to a state of readiness to serve customers and travel demand, including rehiring
and training 1,000 A380 pilots in the past year.
LHR chose not to act, not to plan, not to invest. Now faced
with an “airmageddon” situation due to their incompetence
and non-action, they are pushing the entire burden – of costs and the scramble to
sort the mess - to airlines and travellers.
The shareholders of London Heathrow should scrutinise the decisions of the LHR management team.
Given the tremendous value that the aviation community generates
for the UK economy and communities, we welcome the action taken by the UK Department
for Transport and Civil Aviation Authority to seek information from LHR on their
response plans, systems resilience, and to explain the seemingly arbitrary cap of
100,000 daily passengers. Considering LHR handled 80.9 million passengers annually
in 2019, or a daily average of 219,000, the cap represents greater than a 50% cut
at a time when LHR claims to have 70% of ground handling resources in place.
Until further notice, Emirates plans to operate as
scheduled to and from LHR.