A radar fault in the UK's air traffic control system caused major disruptions, leading to over 100 flight cancellations and delays at several airports, affecting thousands of passengers nationwide.
Passengers stand with their luggage, after radar failure led to the suspension of outbound flights across the UK. (Reuters Photo)
More than 100 flights were cancelled and several others were delayed on Wednesday after a technical glitch in the UK's air traffic control system caused significant disruption at major airports across the country.
The issue, described by the Air Traffic Services (NATS) as radar-related, briefly suspended departures at Heathrow, Gatwick, Manchester, Birmingham, Cardiff, Edinburgh, and London City airports.
Although the problem was reportedly resolved within 20 minutes by switching to a backup system, knock-on delays and cancellations lasted for several hours, affecting thousands of passengers.
NATS later confirmed that systems were "fully operational" and air traffic capacity was returning to normal, but acknowledged the disruption and apologised for the inconvenience caused.
Ryanair, one of the most affected carriers, criticised the handling of the situation and demanded the resignation of NATS chief executive Martin Rolfe. The airline claimed the disruption lasted over four hours and echoed concerns raised during a similar outage in August 2023, which had also been blamed on system failures.
Airports and airlines advised travellers to check with their carriers before heading to the airport, as recovery operations continued into the evening.
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Published By:
Aashish Vashistha
Published On:
Jul 31, 2025