Anti-rating: 10 European airlines that canceled the most flights in the summer of 2022
Mabrian Technologies, a travel data analytics company, conducted an analysis among European airlines and found out which of them had the most canceled flights last summer. Find out in more detail which companies made it into the top 10 air carriers
Mabrian Technologies, a leading travel data analytics company, conducted an analysis of the European airlines that canceled flights most often last summer.
Between July 17 and August 30, 2022, ten major European airlines canceled almost 9,000 flights. On average, this is 2 flights for every 100 departures scheduled by these carriers.
Which airlines canceled the most flights in 2022?
Leading the list of airlines with the largest number of cancellations is the main German air carrier Lufthansa. During the summer of 2022, the company canceled 2,521 scheduled departures at the last minute, or 3.69% of the carrier's total flights.
Second place was taken by Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) with 812 cancellations. Rounding out the top three was KLM Royal Dutch Airlines with 628 flights.
Full list of air carriers:
1. Lufthansa Airlines – 2,521 flights (3.69%).
2. Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) – 812 canceled flights (3.4%).
3. KLM Royal Dutch Airlines – 628 canceled flights (2.64%).
4. German Eurowings – 835 departures (2.47%).
5. Tap Air Portugal – 379 canceled flights (2.01%).
6. British Airways – 755 canceled flights (1.79%).
7. Hungarian Wizz Air – 591 flights (1.61%).
8. Easy Jet of Great Britain - 1482 flights (1.34%).
9. Air France – 561 flights (1.23%).
10. Spanish Vueling – 417 canceled flights (0.84%).
Despite the fact that in the summer of 2022 there were quite a lot of news about the cancellation of flights by Ryanair in the media space, only 0.5% of flights were canceled by the carrier. The company took 14th place in the rating.
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What are the reasons for flight cancellations?
Due to the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, many airlines and airports laid off a large part of their staff. After the revival of air travel, the lack of sufficient workers became a real problem for companies.
Remaining staff have struggled to cope with the influx of travelers this summer, with frequent strikes resulting in the cancellation of dozens of flights a day.
Analysts and experts hope that the management of airlines will draw a conclusion from the data of 2022 and will not repeat their mistakes in the new tourist season.
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