
The Iran war is reshaping international aviation, with Gulf carriers forced to cancel tens of thousands of flights while rivals from Europe and Asia pick up some of the slack.
Around 1.7 million weekly seats have been removed from the region’s airline schedules so far, equal to around a third of prewar capacity, according to industry analysts OAG.
Saudi-based airlines are operating near-normal schedules, but the larger carriers in Qatar and the UAE are not. Qatar Airways is seeking lower aircraft rental payments as a way to reduce costs, Bloomberg reported. Airlines from other regions, including British Airways, Germany’s Lufthansa, and Hong Kong-based Cathay Pacific have cut back on services to the Gulf or pulled out entirely. At the same time, some have increased capacity on direct Asia-Europe routes that bypass the Gulf, although it is hard to make significant additions quickly, and at affordable prices for passengers.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Chicago reports first rabies-positive dog in 61 years. What we know. - 2
What to know about new CDC deputy director who has been critical of COVID vaccines - 3
5 Most Expected Film Delivery - 4
Ancient Egyptian pharaoh's boat is being reassembled in public at the Grand Egyptian Museum - 5
Israel's Druze use AI to present to UN testimonies of 'sexual terrorism' against Syrian Druze women
Why are NASA's Artemis astronauts wearing orange? What are they bringing to space? What to know about the preparation for their moon mission.
Burkina Faso must 'forget' about democracy, military leader says
Factbox-China's crewed lunar programme eyes astronaut landing by 2030
The Best Competitors of the 21st Hundred years
What’s your chronotype? Knowing whether you’re a night owl or an early bird could help you do better on tests and avoid scams
Asia's migrant workers debate if Gulf jobs are worth deadly risk of Iran war
Former defense minister Gallant vacated home over security threat under Shin Bet direction
SpaceX launches Starlink missions in dual-coast spaceflight doubleheader (videos)
Toddler given just 3 years to live after strange symptoms makes full recovery













