About 10% of flights canceled Thursday at Paris-Charles de Gaulle due to a strike
Some 10% of flights departing from and arriving at Paris-Charles de Gaulle (CDG) will be canceled on Thursday, June 30, due to a social movement which affects the firefighters of the first French airport against the backdrop of salary negotiations and which could extend to other categories of personnel.
As a result of this strike, the General Directorate of Civil Aviation (DGAC) “asked the airlines to preemptively cancel part of the flight schedule. We will thus be able to ensure more than 90% of the flights on the day “specified the ADP Group (Airports of Paris) to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
More specifically, the DGAC has ordered carriers to cancel 17% of their flights between 7 a.m. and 2 p.m., a spokeswoman for the administration told AFP, all for security issues airport operations.
“We recommend passengers to check the news of their flight with their company and to anticipate their arrival at the airport: three hours for a flight [long-courrier] international, two hours for a domestic or European flight”specified Groupe ADP.
From the same source, “Groupe ADP is in permanent contact with the various operational actors of Paris-CDG, airlines and air navigation, to limit the impact of these strikes. We are mobilizing all our information channels so that passengers can best prepare for their trip.”.
Larger strike movement from Friday
For its part, Air France, one of the main user companies of Paris-Charles de Gaulle, underlined that it had been forced to cancel more than 10% of its short and medium-haul flights taking off or landing from CDG, sixty two aircraft movements. Long-haul flights will not be affected. “Our flight schedule is up to date” and affected travelers have been notified, a company spokesperson said, although “Last minute delays and cancellations are not (…) not to be excluded ».
This strike by firefighters comes before a multi-sector movement at Groupe ADP scheduled from Friday to Sunday to demand wage increases. “We are still awaiting confirmation of the number of strikers and its potential impact on air traffic”says the manager.
“For the following days, Air France will adapt its program if necessary”added for its part the company, which “regrets this social movement which comes at a time when air transport as a whole is barely recovering from an unprecedented crisis”due to the Covid-19 pandemic.