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After the Icelandic volcano: what the lawyers expect next

The stragglers among the stranded volcano victims may be arriving home but we are not out of the ash cloud yet. Indeed — from a legal perspective — the crisis has barely started. Only now, as people dust themselves down and turn to the paperwork, can we start to get a glimmer of what lies ahead. And like the volcanic ash itself, the issues arising will drift across the legal landscape from airlines to regulators, insurance companies to ordinary employers who have only a remote interest in the airline business. Read more »

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Internet based courses for Human Factors in Aviation Maintenance and Fuel safety Systems (SFAR 88/CDCCL)

For all engineers and management staff in aviation maintenance

You don’t need to travel or take time off work so save time and money by taking an initial or continuation courses for Human Factors or Fuel Safety Systems (SFAR 88/CDCCL) online.

Take your course at home or anywhere with an internet connection and print off your unique part 145 accredited certificate on completion.

 

Go to www.roissyonlinetraining.com and save money now!

Ryanair in dramatic U-turn: We WILL pay ‘unfair’ compensation to passengers stranded by volcanic ash

  • Airline agrees to pay ‘reasonable’ expenses of those caught up in chaos
  • O’Leary blasts governments for not footing hotel, food and phone bills
  • Ryanair boss to fight EU legislation to limit compensation payouts

A controversial budget airline boss has today announced he will comply with ‘unfair’ European law which obliges carriers to refund bills of thousands of passengers caught up in the volcano crisis. Read more »

Internet based courses for Human Factors and Fuel Safety Systems (SFAR88/CDCCL)

For all engineers and management staff in aviation maintenance

Save time and money by taking your initial or continuation courses for Human Factors or Fuel Safety Systems (SFAR 88/CDCCL)online.

Take your course at home or anywhere with an internet connection and print off your unique part 145 accredited certificate on completion.

 

Go to www.roissyonlinetraining.com and save money now!

Air traffic controllers monitor new ash cloud

Air passengers are braced for further delays after warnings that a “new ash cloud” is spreading towards the UK as the volcano eruption in Iceland “strengthened”.

Air traffic control company Nats described the situation as variable, but did say Scottish airports should be available from 7am and other airspace over England from 1pm, although not including the main London airports.

In an update shortly NATs said: “Since our last statement at 9pm yesterday, the volcano eruption in Iceland has strengthened and a new ash cloud is spreading south and east towards the UK.

“This demonstrates the dynamic and rapidly changing conditions in which we are working. Latest information from the Met Office shows that the situation is variable.”

The Prime Minister has announced plans to use Royal Navy vessels to bring home some of the estimated 150,000 Britons stranded abroad.

A brand new £500-million cruise ship, the Celebrity Eclipse, is due to leave Southampton later for Bilbao to pick up around 2,000 British tourists from the northern Spanish port.

A meeting of emergency planning committee Cobra, chaired by Gordon Brown, was held on Monday night to discuss the latest updates on the ash cloud.

A Downing Street spokesman said the committee agreed the Government should “continue to do whatever it can” to return stranded Britons to the UK.

There has been pressure from airlines to restore flights, with carriers including British Airways pointing to the success of test flights to press home their arguments. BA said the flight ban had cost it around £15 million to £20 million a day.

Source : SKY News

Airlines condemn ‘European mess’

Three Royal Navy ships are being drafted to help bring stranded Britons home as UK airspace remains restricted.

The UK’s emergency committee Cobra discussed options to address the travel chaos caused by a volcanic ash cloud and will hold another meeting later.

The three ships are heading for Spain and unspecified Channel ports.

Air traffic control service Nats has extended flight restrictions to 0100 BST Tuesday, but ministers are hopeful airspace may reopen later that day.

Transport Secretary Lord Adonis said Met Office reports of a “dramatic reduction in volcanic activity on Monday morning” meant it might be possible to open airspace on Tuesday if the reduction was sustained.

“If it’s possible to start opening airports tomorrow, contingency plans are being put in place to get as many people through those airports as fast as possible,” he told BBC News.

Planes were first grounded in the UK at midday on Thursday amid fears particles in the ash cloud from Eyjafjallajoekull could cause engines to shut down.

‘Human consequences’

The Met Office has advised that the volcano is now less active than previously, although weather patterns continue to blow volcanic ash towards the UK.

Brian Golding, head of forecasting at the Met Office, said there were “promising signs” the wind will be blowing in a different direction by the end of the weekend.

Travel agents’ association Abta said its “rough estimate” was that 150,000 Britons are currently stranded abroad, and rail and ferry services have been stretched to the limit by passengers seeking other means to return.

Following the Cobra meeting, the prime minister outlined discussions he had held with Spanish premier Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero about the use of airports in Spain, which retain a limited service as they are at the edge of the ash cloud.

“I talked to Prime Minister Zapatero and he has offered in principle the use of Spanish airports as a hub to bring people back to Britain,” he said.

“We are now looking (at) transport arrangements that we will support as a government – coach, ferry and train – to get people either from Madrid or another Spanish airport back to Britain.”

He added that HMS Ark Royal, HMS Ocean and HMS Albion would soon be deployed towards Channel ports for the effort.

“I believe this is one of the most serious transport disruptions we have faced,” Mr Brown said.

It’s got financial consequences as well as human consequences and we will do everything in our power to make sure all the arrangements are in place to help people where possible to get back home.”

HMS Albion was deployed to Spain to return 220 members of the 3 Rifles battalion to the UK, as they remain stranded on their way back from Afghanistan.

On Sunday, 300 of the 3 Rifles battalion returned to the UK via coach and ferry.

HMS Albion is due to arrive in Santander, in northern Spain, on Tuesday morning and may also carry civilians on its return.

Shadow transport secretary Theresa Villiers said: “It is good news for Britons trying to get home that the government are now looking to make use of the Royal Navy. People stranded abroad need to know all that can be done to help them is being done and this is a first step.”

Shadow tourism minister Tobias Ellwood accused the government of “dithering” in its duty to help Britons stranded abroad.

Mr Ellwood, a former pilot, suggested allocating emergency drop-off points for all UK-bound flights in Bordeaux, Marseille, Madrid and Barcelona and bringing passengers back into the UK on planes flying at a low altitude.

Liberal Democrat transport spokesman Norman Baker said the length of time British passengers faced being stranded for needed to be “urgently assessed”.

In other developments:

  • British Airways says it has asked the European Union and the government for financial compensation for the closure of airspace
  • Europe’s biggest travel operator TUI Travel, which owns Thomson and First Choice, says the disruption caused by the volcanic ash has cost the group about £20m so far
  • Radio 1 breakfast show presenter Chris Moyles misses his show after being grounded in New York
  • Bodies representing most European airlines and airports call for an urgent review of the flight restrictions being imposed
  • Teachers’ union NASUWT has urges schools not to penalise teachers who fail to return after the Easter holiday because of flight suspensions
  • Fulham’s Europa League semi-final tie at Hamburg will go ahead on Thursday. Uefa is expected to announce later on Monday whether Liverpool’s semi-final against Atletico Madrid will be played on the same night in Spain
  • Norfolkline, which runs a cross-channel ferry service between Dover and Dunkirk, is providing coaches on its ferries to enable foot passengers to travel to and from the UK on Monday
  • Stranded travellers are using social media to organise inventive ways to return home

Clouded economics

EU transport ministers are also expected to hold emergency talks by video conference on how to ease the chaos caused by the volcanic ash cloud that has paralysed air travel across Europe.

The talks come as airports and airlines have called for flight restrictions – said to be costing airlines $200m (£130m) a day – to be reviewed.

British commercial pilots‘ union Balpa said the industry will need the same of kind of government rescue following the eruption as some banks have had, with a number of airlines “staring bankruptcy in the face”.

Tim Jeans, managing director of the airline Monarch, said that “clearly you cannot sell a ticket for somebody from say Alicante to London for £60 and pick up a £2,000 bill”.

“No business could stand that and the UK airline industry is no different.”

Airports Council International (ACI) Europe and the Association of European Airlines (AEA) have questioned the proportionality of the flight restrictions currently imposed.

ACI’s director general Oliver Jankovek said safety was an “absolute priority” but it was important to distinguish whether there was a “genuine risk”.

However, Eurocontrol, the organisation in charge of air safety in Europe, has denied aviation authorities are being over-cautious.

A number of airlines, including British Airways, have said they have carried out test flights within restricted zones with no obvious damage to aircraft.

BA chief executive Willie Walsh said analysis of its test flight and those of other airlines provided “fresh evidence that the current blanket restrictions on airspace are unnecessary”.

Lord Adonis said: “In light of the test results we’re getting from flights in Britain and similar test flights that have been taking place in Europe, discussions are taking place between the safety authorities and the manufacturers, to see whether there can be any updating of the safety regime for operating planes.”

Meanwhile, Dr Guy Gratton, head of the Facility of Airborne Atmospheric Measurement, a joint body belonging to the Met Office and the Natural Environment Research Council, said that “it’s still quite a complex mixture of clear air and very worrying – but invisible -volcanic ash at all sorts of heights”.

Anyone concerned about the safety of a British national stranded abroad can call a Foreign Office helpline on 020 7008 0000, or visit its website.

Stranded Britons should contact their local embassy, high commission or consulate.

Source : BBC News.

Pilots call for airline bail-out

British pilots have called for a banking-style rescue of the UK airline industry, which has been ground to a halt by a volcanic ash cloud.

The British Airline Pilots’ Association (Balpa) said the financial impact “could not be more serious”.

“The government needs to step in and show the same approach it took to keeping banks afloat,” Balpa said.

“If it fails to act it will find that an equally-important foundation of our economy is lost.”

The airline industry is still struggling to recover from a global slump in demand for air travel, brought on by the economic crisis.

It is estimated that the flight restrictions that have been in place since Thursday will cost airlines about $200m (£130m) a day.

Balpa also called on action from the Europe Union.

“The EU needs to act as their delayed passenger compensation scheme was never designed with this situation in mind and is now crippling our industry,” the union said.

Source : BBC News

British Airways seeks compensation for ash chaos

British Airways has said it has asked the European Union and the UK government for financial compensation for the closure of airspace.

BA also said that its test flight through the no-fly zone had revealed “no variations in the aircraft’s normal operational performance”.

The airline estimates that the crisis is costing it about £15m to £20m a day.

Virtually all flights in and out of the UK have been grounded since 1100 BST on Thursday because of volcanic ash.

“This is an unprecedented situation that is having a huge impact on customers and airlines alike,” said BA chief executive Willie Walsh.

On Sunday, BA ran a two-and-a-half-hour test flight over the Atlantic to assess any damage caused by the ash. Read more »

Internet based training courses for Fuel Safety Systems and Human Factors

For all engineers and management staff in aviation maintenance

Save time and money by taking your initial or continuation courses for Human Factors or Fuel Safety Systems online.

Take your course at home or anywhere with an internet connection and print off your unique part 145 accredited certificate on completion.

 

Go to www.roissyonlinetraining.com and save money now!

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