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Airlines can cancel flights in advance over fuel shortages, under new plans

The plan would let carriers cancel or consolidate flights weeks ahead and keep slots, while officials warn of record-low jet fuel shipments.

  • On Sunday, the government announced plans to relax strict 'use it or lose it' flight slot rules, allowing carriers to cancel or merge flights weeks in advance to prevent last-minute disruptions.
  • Supplies have tightened following Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical waterway responsible for approximately 41% of Europe's jet fuel, with Kpler reporting global shipments dropped below 2.3 million tonnes last week.
  • Current regulations require carriers to use allocated slots at least 80% of the time or risk losing them, while Air India recently cut nearly 100 flights due to high fuel costs.
  • Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander stated the legislation provides tools to "avoid unnecessary disruption at the departure gate this summer," while Tim Alderslade, chief executive of Airlines UK, welcomed the contingency planning.
  • Shadow Transport Secretary Richard Holden warned holidaymakers could still face significant disruption, as experts caution that delivery failures linked to the Middle East conflict could cause shortages within weeks.
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The United Kingdom airlines will be able to cancel flights weeks before, without losing valuable take-off and landing slots, as part of new government measures to prevent airport chaos in the event of a fuel crisis, reports Reuters.

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Center

British airlines will be able to cancel or regroup flights this summer to save fuel, based on the continuing disruption of supply caused by the Middle East war, reports The Guardian.

·Romania
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The Telegraph broke the news in London, United Kingdom on Saturday, May 2, 2026.
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