Flight Cancellations

Iceland Volcano Erupts Affecting Travel to/from Scotland

Iceland Volcano Erupts Affecting Travel to/from Scotland

(Dive Travel Business News - May 24, 2011) --  Iceland’s  Grimsvotn volcano, which lies beneath the ice of the uninhabited Vatnajokull glacier in southeast Iceland - about 120 miles east of the capital, Reykjavik - began erupting Saturday May 21, 2011 for the first time since 2004. It was the volcano's largest eruption in 100 years. read more »

Missed Flights Wreak Havoc for Travelers

More Travelers Missing Flights this Summer

(Dive Travel Business News - July 19, 2010) -- Planes are running so full this summer that U.S. travelers bound for summer vacations may have to wait overnight for the next plane if they miss a flight.

Flight cancellations due to bad weather and equipment problems are compounding the seat shortage issue, creating a domino effect, putting stress on other airlines and routes, and causing missed connections to international destinations. Few options are left for summer dive travelers who've paid for a ticket but can't get to their dive destination on their original itinerary.

For the past two years, US airlines have been cutting back service, using smaller planes or cutting routes altogether in a bid to address the impact of a poor economy, rising fuel prices and fewer passengers. The U.S. airlines' belt-tightening included a 6.7 percent capacity cut in 2008 and a nearly 9 percent cut in 2009 in a scramble to better match the number of seats to a reduced number of passengers flying. As a result, load factors - the measure of how full planes are - are up. read more »

Update on Volcano-related Flight Disruptions

Ash from Iceland Volcano disrupts Europe's airports

(Dive Travel Business News - April 20, 2010) -- Since Thursday April 15, 2010, the blanket of ash from the Eyjafjallajökull volcano eruption in Iceland has forced the cancellation of at least 70,000 flights, stranding travelers at airports around the world and grinding sectors of Europe's economy to a halt.

Today, fliers from all over the globe are seeing some hope as airports are gradually opening up.This is good news for those dive destinations in the Caribbean, Pacific and Indian Ocean with a predominantly European clientele where vacations have been postponed after almost a week of flight cancellations.

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