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The French air traffic controllers walkout disrupts travel in the early summer season

French air traffic controllers started a two-day walkout on Thursday in protest of staff shortages, and outdated equipment. This led to hundreds cancellations as summer is just getting underway.

France's civil Aviation Agency DGAC has told airlines to re-evaluate their schedules. This includes at Paris' Roissy de Gaulle Airport - one Europe's most busy hubs – forcing carriers to cancel flights.

Air France, France’s largest airline, announced that it had adjusted its flight schedule without providing details. However, it maintained its entire long-haul schedule. British Airways, owned by IAG, was using larger aircraft in order to minimize disruption.

Ryanair announced that it was forced to cancel over 30,000 flights on Thursday and Friday.

Michael O'Leary, CEO of Ryanair, said: "Once more European families are being held hostage by French air traffic controllers on strike." It is unfair to EU families and passengers on holiday.

Easyjet has announced that it will cancel 274 flights on Thursday and Friday.

The strike coincided the beginning of summer vacations in Europe, which is one of the busiest periods for travel.

UNSA-ICNA is France's second largest union of air traffic controllers. Its members are striking because they feel understaffed, have outdated equipment, and suffer from a toxic management environment. USAC-CGT said that the DGAC failed to understand the frustration of controllers.

UNSA-ICNA stated in a press release that "the DGAC fails to modernise tools that are vital to air traffic control, even though they continue to promise that the necessary resources will be made available."

The agency added that "the systems are on the verge of failure, and it is asking for more staff to compensate its problems."

The DGAC didn't immediately respond to a comment request on the concerns of the unions. The complaints are similar to those of air traffic controllers from the United States who have complained about outdated infrastructure, staffing shortages and obsolete technology.

The French Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot deemed the union's demands unacceptable.

On Friday, the DGAC requested that airlines reduce one out of four flights into and out of Paris and nearly half of all flights leaving the capital. The south was particularly hard-hit.

The agency warned that "despite these preventative measures", disruptions and significant delays can be expected in all French airports. It urged passengers to switch flights if possible.

Luxair Luxembourg Airlines has warned that additional delays and schedules changes may occur across other destinations due to air traffic rerouting.

O'Leary, Ryanair's CEO, urged the European Commission (the executive arm of the European Union) to reform EU air-traffic control services in order to provide adequate staffing during peak times and to protect overflights, those flights that fly over a region or country without landing, when there are national strikes. Reporting by Makini Brrice, Richard Lough, and Sudip Kar Gupta from Paris, Sarah Young from London, Mark Potter for editing.

(source: Reuters)