Effort needed to reduce flight delays, cancellations


Actions must be taken to reduce the number of delayed and cancelled flights while the infrastructure remained limited amid the booming of air travel in post-pandemic period.

While domestic aviation recovers, it is important to make an effort to reduce the rate of delays and cancellations. — VNA/VNS Photo

The Civil Aviation Authority of Viet Nam on Wednesday asked domestic airlines to make an effort to reduce the rates of flight delays and cancellations.

Dinh Viet Thang, the civil aviation authority’s director, said that the domestic aviation market was recovering at a pace that beat every forecast, citing statistics that domestic visitors through airports in June increased by 38 per cent against the same period in 2019 before COVID broke out.

However, the number of delayed and cancelled flights has increased significantly, especially at Noi Bai and Tan Son Nhat international airports, as the aviation infrastructure remains undeveloped, he said.

“We cannot wait until the infrastructure system improves to reduce the rates of delays and cancellations,” Thang said.

He pointed out that Noi Bai T3 Terminal was expected to go operational in July 2024 at the earliest and Long Thanh Airport in the second or third quarter of 2025, while Tan Son Nhat Airport would not be upgraded until Long Thanh was put into operation.

“What’s important is to find new ways to solve the problems, including the application of technology to reduce the number of delays and cancellations and ensure travel demand,” Thang said.

Affirming that there was much work to do, Thang said that it was important to have the determination to improve the situation, adding that if each stage was shortened and operation capacity improved, the airport would have better traffic, meaning delays and cancellations would decrease.

After surveying Tan Son Nhat Airport, Deputy Director of the Civil Aviation Authority Ho Minh Tan said that the flight delays at Tan Son Nhat Airport were quite severe in June. There were several reasons for the delays and cancellations.

Besides the overloaded infrastructure or bad weather, the arrangement of aeroplanes in the parking lots was not reasonable, not considering the aircraft's departure time.

According to Nguyen Quy Don, deputy director of the Southern Flight Management Corporation, pilots must strictly follow the time they are allowed to occupy the runway. Every second saved from the time of runway occupation means a lot to flight operation.

Sharing the same viewpoint, Bui Thanh Ha from the Viet Nam Flight Management Corporation said that in a recent survey at Tan Son Nhat Airport, when Singapore’s B777-300 aeroplane landed, it took the pilot only 60 seconds to get off the runway while the Vietnamese pilot took nearly 70 seconds.

Deputy Director General of Vietnam Airlines Trinh Hong Quang said that no carriers wanted its flights to be delayed or cancelled. However, the market was growing too fast beyond every forecast, and carriers could not keep up.

Quang said that the carrier would cooperate with relevant management agencies to improve services and reduce the rates of delays and cancellations.

According to Thang, when the number of passengers on the plane increased, the infrastructure was limited, and congestion and flight delays were unavoidable.

It would be hard for passengers to accept that the flight, which took only 45 minutes from departure to arrival, was delayed for hours.

If there were no improvements, the number of flights must be reduced, Thang said, adding that even the UK had to cancel hundreds of thousands of flights recently.

Thang asked the Viet Nam Flight Management Corporation and the Airports Corporation of Viet Nam to coordinate to discuss the operation rules for parking and be flexible in accordance with flight times.

It is also necessary to regulate the time for occupying the runways of specific airports, especially Noi Bai and Tan Son Nhat airports, which were overcrowded, he said.

More than 5,600 flights of domestic airlines were delayed in June, accounting for more than 18 per cent of the total number of flights and nearly 16 per cent higher than the same period of 2021 and 9.4 per cent higher than May.

Sixty-five flights were cancelled last month or 0.2 per cent of the total number of flights.

The most common reason for the delay was a late return of an aeroplane.

According to the International Air Transport Association, Viet Nam is among the countries with the fastest recovering domestic aviation market. — VNS

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