The holiday travel rush hit its peak Friday as mild weather and lower flight cancelation rates raised hopes for merrier drivers and airline passengers than last year.
US airlines are predicting a blockbuster holiday season and have projected confidence they can handle the crowds after hiring thousands of pilots, flight attendants and other workers, seeking to avoid the delays and suspensions that marred travel last year and culminated with the Southwest Airline debacle that stranded more than 2 million people.
Airlines have canceled just 1.2 per cent of US flights so far this year, the lowest in five years, but bad weather is always a threat. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has warned the government will be holding the airlines accountable to operate smoothly and treat passengers well if there are disruptions. Earlier this week, Transportation Department announced a settlement in which Southwest will pay USD140 million for its meltdown last year.
Early Friday, there were less than 40 flights cancelled nationwide in the US and about 400 that were delayed, according to FlightAware.
Auto club AAA forecasts that 115 million people in the US will go 50 miles or more from home between Saturday and New Year’s Day. That’s up 2 per cent over last year.
The Transportation Security Administration expected to screen more than 2.5 million travelers Friday, the busiest projected day for air travel this season, along with New Year’s Day. That’s short of the record 2.9 million that agents screened on the Sunday after Thanksgiving, since travel tends to be more spread over over Christmas and New Year’s.
Travel has been strong this year even though many Americans say they are worried about the economy. Inflation has cooled off a bit, and travelers were helped by lower average gas prices and air fares.
The nationwide gas price average Friday was USD3.13 a gallon, down 15 cents from a month ago and about 3 cents more than this time last year, according to AAA. Average fares in October were 13 per cent lower than a year earlier, according to the government’s latest data.
The busiest days on the road will be Saturday and next Thursday, Dec. 28, according to transportation data provider INRIX.
Internationally, air travel has also rebounded, though it remains below pre-pandemic levels.
So far this year, airlines have canceled 1.2 per cent of U.S. flights, down nearly half from 2.1 per cent over the same period last year. Cancellations were well below 1 per cent during Thanksgiving, according to FlightAware. Canceled flights surged last year, as airlines were caught short-staffed when travel rebounded from the pandemic more quickly than expected. Since then, U.S. airlines have hired thousands of pilots, flight attendants and other workers, and the cancellation rate has come down.
Airlines have sold 31 per cent more tickets for international arrivals to global destinations between Dec. 21 and Dec. 31 compared to the similar period last year, according to travel data firm FowardKeys.
Some travelers in northern Europe had a run of bad luck with bad weather and labor unrest.
A storm brought heavy rain and strong winds across northern Europe overnight and into Friday, bringing down trees and prompting warnings of flooding on the North Sea coast.
Workers at the undersea tunnel between Britain and France held a surprise strike on Thursday, forcing the cancelation of passenger and vehicle-carrying service before an agreement with unions was reached.
Eurostar, which operates passenger train services from London to continental Europe, said services will resume Friday and it will run six extra trains between Paris and London into the weekend.
In the US, AccuWeather forecasters say rain storms could hit the Pacific Northwest and the southern Plains states including Texas later this week, but things look brighter for population centers – and key airports – in the Northeast. A Pacific storm pounded parts of Southern California on Thursday with heavy rain and street flooding.
- Published On Dec 22, 2023 at 07:09 PM IST