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Jordan asks airlines to carry additional fuel in the middle of Iran-Israel tension

Jordan has asked all airline companies landing at its airports to bring 45 minutes of reserve fuel, in what professionals view as a preventive procedure in case of an attack by Iran against Israel.

Some airline companies are currently preventing Iranian and Lebanese airspace and cancelling flights to Israel and Lebanon, as issues grow over a possible conflict in the region after the killing of senior members of militant groups Hamas and Hezbollah recently.

The NOTAM, a safety notification provided to pilots, was issued on Sunday by Jordanian authorities, asking all airline companies to bring the reserve fuel for functional reasons. It works until 2200 GMT on Tuesday.

In a bulletin, OPSGROUP, a membership-based organisation that shares flight threat info, said the move led the expected closure of Jordanian airspace, a cautionary relocation in case of an attack on Israel by Iran.

The Jordan NOTAM matters since in the April aerial attack on Israel, Jordan was the first country to close their airspace by NOTAM, well ahead of even Israel, Iran, or Iraq, Mark Zee, OPSGROUP's Chief Executive, informed Reuters.

The 45 minutes would be meant to provide adequate extra fuel for an aircraft to leave Jordanian airspace and land in other places, he added.

Airspace closures connected to war can position substantial limitations on air traffic.

The war in Ukraine, for instance, has positioned significant constraints on European airspace, already under pressure from air traffic control service strikes and strong travel need.

In the Middle East, professionals say the effect might be even bigger.

An attack by Iran on Israel would result in the closure of some of the most greatly trafficked air paths worldwide, said Ian Petchenik, representative for flight tracker FlightRadar24.

Closure of this airspace will require airplane into ever-narrowing corridors to the north and south. Any continual closure of these routes would be a monumental reordering of international air traffic.

(source: Reuters)