
High-speed train line to Spain's Andalusia cut after power cable failure
Around 20 trains were blocked on the tracks or unable to depart on Monday evening, with approximately 10 more cancelled on Tuesday morning in Madrid and southern Spanish cities including Seville, where global leaders are attending a United Nations conference on development financing.
Traffic between the towns of Yeles and La Sagra, about 40 kilometres south of Madrid, was suspended at 8.30 pm when a catenary cable malfunctioned, a spokesperson for state-owned railway infrastructure operator ADIF said.
The cause of the malfunction was unknown, he said, and ADIF has since postponed the resumption of service four times.
In its latest statement, the company said trains between Madrid and Andalusian cities were cancelled until further notice.
ADIF called on regional emergency services to service and evacuate stranded passengers, some of whom spent hours stuck inside the trains as a blistering heatwave scorches the country.
The high-speed network has rapidly expanded in Spain as part of a government push to decarbonise public transportation.
The network connects almost all the country's big cities but is vulnerable to cable incidents as it crosses large swathes of scarcely populated areas.
A copper cable theft paralysed the same line for more than 12 hours in early May.
Three operators service the line, state-owned former monopoly Renfe, Ouigo, a unit of French state train operator SNCF, and Iryo, which is owned by a consortium including Italy's Trenitalia.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

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First Post
3 hours ago
- First Post
Beyond France: Europe's air travel system struggles to cope with post-Covid demand
Europe's skies are buckling under pressure as a French air traffic control strike exposes a continent-wide aviation system struggling with staff shortages, outdated infrastructure and fragmented oversight read more A departures information board is seen at Roissy Charles-de-Gaulle airport, outside Paris, on July 3, 2025, as French air traffic controllers launched a two-day strike to demand better working conditions, disrupting travel for tens of thousands of people at the start of a summer holiday season. AFP The two-day strike by French air traffic controllers on July 3–4 has forced the cancellation of over 1,500 flights and disrupted travel plans for nearly 300,000 passengers, is more than just a national labour dispute. As reported by Airlines for Europe (A4E) and corroborated by Reuters, this latest disruption lays bare the deep, systemic weaknesses in Europe's air travel infrastructure. France's disruption is merely the tip of an iceberg — a symptom of a continent-wide crisis of staffing, ageing infrastructure, fractured airspace management and unsustainable demand. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Post-pandemic surge meets pre-existing strain Europe's aviation system, already creaking before 2020, was pushed to the brink during the Covid-19 pandemic. When air travel plummeted in 2020 and 2021, recruitment was halted, training paused and thousands of aviation professionals took early retirement. As the International Air Transport Association (IATA) noted, air traffic in 2023 had recovered to over 94 per cent of 2019 levels, with December traffic alone surpassing pre-pandemic numbers. This rebound, while welcome, has overwhelmed an industry that had not rebuilt its operational base to match this explosive demand. According to IATA data, European carriers saw full-year traffic climb 22 per cent in 2023 versus 2022, and December 2023 even exceeded pre-pandemic benchmarks for the first time. The upsurge in demand has not been met with a corresponding increase in resources, particularly in air traffic control (ATC), where staffing and infrastructure continue to lag. Chronic shortages and the human toll At the heart of the crisis lies a critical shortage of trained air traffic controllers across Europe. According to Politico, the continent is currently missing between 700 and 1,000 controllers, a figure cited by Frederic Deleau of the International Federation of Air Traffic Controllers' Associations. This shortfall stems from a combination of factors: a high number of retirements, a post-Covid-19 recruitment slump, the time-intensive nature of ATC training and growing burnout among existing staff. The European air traffic control system is especially vulnerable because it relies on a small cadre of highly skilled professionals — approximately 15,000 in the EU, according to PwC. Each controller requires two to three years of intensive training, encompassing theoretical coursework, simulation training and on-the-job experience. Many aspiring controllers are deterred by high entry barriers, including stringent health, language and math requirements as well as an upper age limit of 27 in programmes like Eurocontrol's. Professor Marina Efthymiou of Dublin City University highlights another challenge: talent competition. Middle Eastern nations, including the UAE and Qatar, are aggressively recruiting European-trained controllers with attractive relocation packages. As Europe becomes less competitive, it experiences a 'brain drain' that further hollows out its ATC workforce. Burnout loop and a vicious cycle With too few controllers available, those who remain are pushed into overtime and back-to-back shifts. This leads to mounting fatigue, increasing the likelihood of errors and driving even more personnel to leave the profession. The result is a vicious cycle: understaffing leads to overwork, which leads to more understaffing. Strikes like the one initiated by the French UNSA-ICNA union are often rooted in these exact pressures. As reported by the BBC and Euronews, French controllers walked out in protest over chronic understaffing, poor management practices and the planned introduction of a new clock-in system, which unions say reflects a distrustful and overly rigid managerial approach. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Ageing infrastructure adds to the woes Compounding the workforce issues is Europe's ageing air traffic control infrastructure. Much of the continent still depends on legacy radar and communication technologies developed decades ago. This outdated system contributes to inefficiencies, such as extended flight paths, increased fuel consumption and more delays. Aviation Today noted that unlike the United States—which benefits from a unified, FAA-run airspace—Europe remains divided into national systems with inconsistent standards. These fragmented technologies struggle to communicate efficiently across borders, reducing the system's resilience to disruptions and increasing the chance of cascading failures. Europe's national sovereignty concerns have prevented similar unification, with countries wary of ceding control over airspace management to a supranational body. Efforts to introduce remote-controlled towers in parts of the UK demonstrate one potential path forward, but the technology remains controversial. As the European Transport Workers' Federation pointed out in their communication with Scottish authorities, remote towers present challenges related to weather resilience, cybersecurity and job security, stoking resistance from unions and local communities alike. The fragmented sky Perhaps the most glaring structural weakness in European aviation is its lack of unified airspace management. Despite the perception of a borderless Europe, airspace is still controlled by national authorities operating in isolation. This fragmented system leads to inefficiencies, bottlenecks and a lack of coordination especially during crises. The recent French strike exemplifies the problem. Because France controls a disproportionately large swath of European airspace, delays and cancellations within French borders have ripple effects across the continent. Ryanair reported that even flights not landing in France—those merely flying over—were grounded or rerouted, causing chaos in the UK, Ireland, Spain and Greece. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD High cost of inaction The economic consequences of this dysfunctional system are substantial. A PwC study commissioned by Airlines for Europe estimates that ATC strikes alone impose massive costs not only on airlines but also on the broader economy. Tourism revenues drop, business travel is disrupted and consumer confidence in flying erodes. The European aviation sector supports approximately 5.5 million jobs and contributes €338 billion annually to the EU economy. Its unreliability now threatens that role. This July, Ryanair alone was forced to cancel over 170 flights, disrupting the holidays of more than 30,000 passengers, the BBC reported. EasyJet and other low-cost carriers have voiced their frustration, emphasising that the current situation is untenable during the peak travel season. A wave of labour unrest across the continent France is far from alone. Across Europe, aviation workers are increasingly turning to strikes to demand better pay, working conditions and job security. According to TimeOut, industrial action is also planned or underway in Italy, Spain, Finland and Greece during July 2025. The growing frequency and coordination of these strikes point to deeper, systemic grievances exacerbated by inflation, cost-of-living crises and stagnant wages. The European economy is still reeling from the cumulative impact of Covid-19, energy shocks and geopolitical tensions. As workers in high-pressure environments demand fair treatment, authorities have failed to deliver coherent, cross-border solutions. Towards a unified sky The idea of a 'Single European Sky' (SES) has long been touted as the solution to many of these problems. Proposed as far back as the early 2000s, the SES initiative seeks to replace Europe's patchwork of national ATC systems with a streamlined, continent-wide network. The goals: cut down on congestion, standardise regulations and implement next-generation technologies. While there has been some progress—such as the creation of Functional Airspace Blocks (FABs) to encourage regional cooperation—full implementation remains elusive. Aviation Today cites bureaucratic inertia and national security concerns as the primary barriers. Unions also resist the change, fearing job losses from automation and consolidation. Nonetheless, with mounting delays and rising demand, calls for urgent reform are intensifying. The SES is no longer a theoretical fix. It is a necessity if Europe hopes to remain competitive in global aviation. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD A litmus test for Europe's capacity to act Unless decisive action is taken, the pattern of summer travel disruptions will only worsen. Air travel in Europe is now at or above 2019 levels, and the upward trajectory is expected to continue. Without adequate staffing, infrastructure renewal and cross-border coordination, the cracks in the system will deepen. In a continent that prides itself on integration and mobility, air travel should be a showcase of unity and efficiency. Instead, it is becoming a symbol of fragmentation and dysfunction. The challenge is no longer identifying the problem; it is finding the political courage to solve it.


The Hindu
5 hours ago
- The Hindu
French air traffic controllers strike: About 40% of flights cancelled at Paris airports
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Business Standard
6 hours ago
- Business Standard
Air traffic controllers' strike disrupts travel to, from, and over France
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