logo
Iran reopens central and western airspace after ceasefire with Israel: What does this mean for international flights?

Iran reopens central and western airspace after ceasefire with Israel: What does this mean for international flights?

Hindustan Times2 days ago

Iran has reopened its airspace over central and western parts of the country to international overflights, the Roads and Urban Development Ministry announced on Saturday. The decision follows a ceasefire with Israel that brought a 12-day conflict to a halt earlier this week. According to an AFP report, the move was approved by Iran's Civil Aviation Organization (CAO) after comprehensive safety and security assessments were completed by relevant authorities. Following a ceasefire with Israel, Iran has reopened its central and western airspace to international overflights.(Representative Image: Unsplash )
Also Read: One Big Beautiful Bill Act: US Senate Republicans unveil Trump's sweeping tax-cut, spending bill
International transit flights can now journey through the reopened central and western corridors. However, flights to and from Iranian airports in the northern, southern, and western regions, including major hubs like Tehran's Mehrabad and Imam Khomeini airports, remain suspended until further notice.
The CAO, in a separate statement, added that the country's airspace in these areas will stay closed until 14:00 local time (10.30 GMT).
The announcement came after Wednesday's reopening of Iran's eastern airspace for domestic and international flights, including overflights. Mashhad Airport, one of the sites allegedly targeted during the Israeli offensive, was now operational again, along with Chabahar Airport in the southeast.
Spokesperson for the Roads and Urban Development ministry, Majid Akhavan, had noted that the eastern half of the country was fully open for flights, adding that it included transit flights and operations involving airports located in the region.
Also read: Birthright citizenship case: What US Supreme Court ruling means for immigrants Iranian airspace was closed during the conflict
According to Xinhua, Iran had entirely closed its skies on June 13. This was after a wave of Israeli airstrikes targeted Tehran and other locations, prompting retaliatory missile launches. With the closure, several air routes across the Middle East were severely affected.
The ceasefire was announced on Tuesday, after which Iranian authorities began to start their air travel operations and chose to open overflight corridors first, which is essential for international transit routes connecting Asia, the Middle East, and Europe.
The government has warned potential travelers and residents not to go to airports in the restricted zones and to seek as much further information from official announcements regarding the status of regional air travel, the reports added.
The airspace reopening would ease the pressure on world air routes that, by nature, act as corridors for long-haul flights linking European and Asian airlines. FAQs
What airspace is currently open in Iran?
Iran has reopened its eastern, central, and western airspace for international overflights. However, flights to and from northern, southern, and western airports remain suspended.
Why did Iran close its airspace?
Iran shut its skies on June 13 following a series of Israeli airstrikes, which led to a 12-day conflict between the two countries.
Are Iranian airports open now?
Some eastern airports, like Mashhad and Chabahar, are operational again. Airports in Tehran and other western and southern regions remain closed for now.
When will Iran fully reopen its skies?
Flights in restricted regions are expected to resume gradually. As of now, closures remain in place until at least Sunday 14:00 local time (10:30 GMT), pending further updates.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why Canada made a u-turn on its contentious Digital Services Tax
Why Canada made a u-turn on its contentious Digital Services Tax

Indian Express

time20 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Why Canada made a u-turn on its contentious Digital Services Tax

In a bid to restart stalled trade negotiations with the United States, Canada scrapped its Digital Services Tax (DST) hours before it was due to take effect on Monday. Calling the DST 'a direct and blatant attack' on the US, President Donald Trump had on Friday announced the termination of all trade discussions with Canada. With the contentious tax out of the way, talks between Washington and Ottawa will likely resume. What was the DST? The DST was a 3% levy on the digital services revenue a firm made from Canadian users above $20 million in a calendar year. Controversially, the tax was set to be retroactively implemented beginning 2022. This would have had a significant impact on American technology giants such as Google, Meta, Apple, and Amazon — American tech companies would have had to pay roughly $2.7 billion to the Canadian government, if the tax were to be implemented, The New York Times had reported. 'The DST was announced in 2020 to address the fact that many large technology companies operating in Canada may not otherwise pay tax on revenues generated from Canadians…,' Canada's finance ministry said in its statement on Sunday. While the law had been passed earlier, payments were due from Monday. What does Canada's U-turn mean? Canada is the United States' second-largest trading partner after Mexico, and the largest buyer of US exports. It bought $349.4 billion of US goods and exported $412.7 billion to the US last year, according to US Census Bureau data. At the same time, it currently faces the steepest of Trump's tariffs: apart from the 10% base tariff imposed on most countries, Canada (and Mexico) face an additional 25% on all exports to the US, apparently meant to curb illegal immigration and stop fentanyl smuggling. Trump has also slapped 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Canada and 25% on auto imports. This makes getting a trade deal with the US a top priority for Canada. Scrapping the DST would help in this regard — Trump had been among its most vehement critics. Early indications are that Washington and Ottawa could meet the previously-set July 21 deadline for a trade agreement. Domestically, the U-turn is unlikely to hurt Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney, despite his election platform revolving around standing up to the US President. This is because the DST was not particularly popular in Canada either since it could have raised the cost of all kinds of digital services — from hailing cab rides to streaming movies. In fact, in recent months, many speculated that the tax's best purpose could be to serve as a bargaining chip in ongoing trade talks with the US.

Sensex rise 118 points, Nifty 50 reaches 25,535; markets open higher on Tuesday
Sensex rise 118 points, Nifty 50 reaches 25,535; markets open higher on Tuesday

New Indian Express

time21 minutes ago

  • New Indian Express

Sensex rise 118 points, Nifty 50 reaches 25,535; markets open higher on Tuesday

CHENNAI: Indian markets opened slightly higher on Tuesday, supported by gains in Asian equities and improved global sentiment ahead of the upcoming US tariff deadline on July 9. The Sensex rose 118 points to 83,724 at the opening bell, while the Nifty 50 added 18 points to reach 25,535. This positive start reflected a 0.6% rise in the MSCI Asia ex-Japan index and followed a strong finish on Wall Street, fueled by hopes of progress in U.S. trade talks. Meanwhile, oil prices edged lower on expectations of increased output from OPEC+—a welcome sign for India, which relies heavily on crude imports. Additionally, oil prices declined on expectations of an OPEC+ output increase—a favorable development for India, which is a major crude importer. The US dollar softened ahead of key US economic data and an upcoming vote on President Trump's fiscal reforms, which also supported emerging markets like India. On the domestic front, sentiment was supported by hopes for a breakthrough in India–US trade talks. Investors are closely watching for any early resolution ahead of the July 9 deadline. Among stocks in focus, Apollo Hospitals gained over 4% in early trade following news of a planned spin-off and listing of its digital health and pharmacy unit within the next 18–21 months. The parent company plans to retain a 15% stake in the new entity.

The AI boom can give rooftop solar a new pitch
The AI boom can give rooftop solar a new pitch

Time of India

time25 minutes ago

  • Time of India

The AI boom can give rooftop solar a new pitch

Rooftop solar has often been sold as a way of going off-grid. Facing a crisis, it needs a new pitch: Helping that same grid cope with the demands of the artificial intelligence boom. Federal credits for rooftop solar are poised on a knife edge in the giant tax bill wending its way through Congress. Current Senate language looks set to chop them to zero in short order, although one Senator indicated this week that some unspecified relief may yet surface in future drafts. Absent a significant revision, that the solar-allergic House majority could live with, this would be the third big blow to the industry in as many years; the others being cuts to state incentives, particularly in California, and higher interest rates. Installations fell last year for the first time since 2018. Shares of the number one installer, Sunrun Inc., are down by almost a quarter so far this year and almost 90% over the past four years. Two large firms, Sunnova Energy International Inc. and loan provider Solar Mosaic LLC, filed for bankruptcy earlier this month. Lost incentives and higher interest rates don't just represent an economic headwind; they upend the entire business model. Rooftop solar has developed peculiarly, and expensively, in the US, in part because the federal tax credit, while useful, is cumbersome. An industry of financial middlemen emerged to monetize those credits, whose added fees equate to about one third of the cash cost of a home solar system, according to Bloomberg were made viable by low interest rates and state incentives mandating that utilities buy any excess power from rooftop systems at retail rates, well above its marginal value and effectively forcing bill-payers without solar panels to subsidize their neighbors. This, along with rising utility rates, allowed developers to offer savings against traditional electricity bills. The result was a growing, but fragile, industry that must reduce its vulnerability to tax-policy swings, regardless of the precise pain inflicted by Republicans this time. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Three Lies About Australia's Economy Fat Tail Daily Learn More Undo Assuming federal tax credits are toast, rooftop solar will suffer a massive cost shock. The only remedies are to cut costs in areas such as marketing and installation, or find new sources of revenue. There is certainly scope for cost cuts, not least those financing fees. But this would be a multi-year process, with lower sales in the meantime. Marketing and permitting costs are ripe for cuts but also sticky. Bloomberg The bigger opportunity lies in remaking rooftop solar's value proposition — which begins by making it California eventually stopped paying homeowners for their excess electricity during the day when it was quite clear the market was saturated with solar power anyway. New state regulations encourage rooftop panels to be paired with batteries so that owners can reap more value from storing excess daytime power and using it to limit their consumption of more expensive grid-power after sundown. Live Events This is the necessary step toward a bigger goal: Virtual power plants, or VPPs, which take the atomized resources spread across rooftops and basements and combine them via software into large scale, coordinated power players on the grid. The catch with batteries is the added expense. A typical residential solar system cost almost $29,000, before federal and state incentives, at the end of 2024, according to Energy Sage, an online marketplace for clean energy products. Even though the current tax-bill language appears kinder to batteries, adding one of those cost an additional $13,500 — and that was before tariffs kicked in. Taken together, that's almost as much as buying a new vehicle. Bloomberg There are, however, other potential pools of value that such a system can tap. As I wrote here last fall, electricity bills are a concern already across much of the US and the energy needs of datacenters, electric vehicles and the like will strain grid-operators' ability to balance reliability, affordability and sustainability. Rising costs, and lengthening backlogs, for everything from gas turbines to transformers make the usual model of overbuilding grid-capacity to meet rising peaks in demand economically extortionate and perhaps simply infeasible. Distributed energy resources, which include rooftop systems and co-located batteries, offer a means to shave those peaks in demand instead — provided they can be aggregated. A homeowner can use a battery to shift excess solar at noon to curb their draw on the grid at night. A VPP, however, can provide grid-balancing services, including flexible demand management, in return for payment. At scale, load-shifting not only saves on individual bills; it reduces the amount of investment required to upgrade and expand the grid, particularly in local distribution networks where spending has increased the most. This also ultimately reduces power bills and makes those new loads coming onto the grid easier to bear. Plus, distributed resources offer backup in a blackout and can often be sited and connected far more quickly than utility-scale projects. Jigar Shah, former head of the Department of Energy's Loan Programs Office who now runs advisory firm Multiplier, is something of an evangelist for this sort of rooftop reinvention. In a recent essay for Utility Dive, he highlights the efforts of Xcel Energy Inc., a large Midwestern utility, to incorporate distributed capacity into its grid planning, taking such resources from being just 'backup' for the system to being part of its 'backbone.' There is an irony here. Not too long ago, the utility sector was fretting about cheap solar power fueling mass disconnections by homeowners, touching off a 'death spiral' of higher power bills pushing yet more people to disconnect. Today, those rooftops could be key allies for a grid struggling with its biggest challenge in decades.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store