
Travel chaos as Ryanair cancels 170 flights due to French air traffic control strike
Other airlines have also had to ground certain routes. The cancellations are set to affect tens of thousands of passengers during the busy summer travel period, including many Irish passengers planning to travel to and from a number of destinations, including popular holiday spots in France and Spain.
Some flights between Ireland and Spain travelling through French airspace have also been affected. A number of flights in and out of Dublin Airport have been affected.
Airlines including Ryanair, Air France, Aer Lingus and Transavia France have had to pull flights throughout the day. Routes cancelled include the Parisian airports of Beauvais, Orly, and Charles De Gaulle, as well as Biarritz, Nice, and the Spanish city of Murcia.
In a statement today, Ryanair said that flights through French airspace from the UK to Greece and Spain to Ireland will also be impacted. The airline said: "In addition to flights to/from France being cancelled, this strike will also affect all French overflights." Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary has continued calls for the European Commission to reform European Union air traffic control services.
The CEO said: "Another month of ATC mismanagement and staff shortages has passed, but neither the EU Commission nor national Transport Ministers – who are responsible for national ATC services – have taken any action to fix Europe's worst-performing ATC providers. As a result, France, Spain, Germany, Portugal, and the UK continue to delay thousands of Ryanair flights and millions of Ryanair passengers, putting them in stark contrast to other EU States, like Slovakia, Denmark, Ireland, Belgium, and Netherlands, who are delivering many many more on-time flights, making them the best ATC providers in Europe so far this year."
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