More than 3,000 flights cancelled, delayed over southern US storm
SAN FRANCISCO – More than 3,000 flights were cancelled on Jan 10 and thousands more hit by delays due to a storm in the southern United States, airlines and tracking website FlightAware have reported.
Delta Airlines said a “worse-than-expected mix of winter weather” prompted the shutdown of all five runways at Atlanta International Airport for more than two hours.
“Delta canceled approximately 1,100 flights across our network” on Jan 10, the carrier said as it was “working to recover the airline heading into (Jan 11)”.
A Delta plane also had to abort take-off at Atlanta because of an engine problem.
More than 200 passengers and crew aboard the Boeing 757-300 had to exit via emergency slides, US media reported, citing a company statement.
Dallas Fort Worth, in Texas, and Charlotte Douglas, in North Carolina, were also affected by the bad weather, with more than 1,200 flights cancelled across the two airports according to FlightAware.
The tracking website recorded more than 3,000 cancellations in total on Jan 10 across multiple airports.
The United States was already hit by a winter storm at the start of the week, leaving at least five people dead and prompting hundreds of flights to be scrapped as it swept across the center and east of the country.
Temperatures plummeted below -18 deg C in some places, and tens of thousands of people were left without electricity. AFP
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