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Omicron variant: Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific slashes passenger, cargo flights on Thursday in latest contingency bid amid tighter Covid-19 rules set to kick in for aircrew

  • Operations director warns staff that effects of potential rule changes will be ‘significant and far more challenging to manage’
  • City’s flag carrier drops 28 of 61 departing passenger flights, cancels five cargo trips

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Cathay planes at Hong Kong’s airport. Photo: Winson Wong

Cathay Pacific has been forced into contingency mode, cancelling almost half of planned passenger flights and a third of cargo ones on Thursday, a move that may cause more fissures in an already stressed global supply chain.

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According to live flight schedule data from Hong Kong’s Airport Authority, the city’s flag carrier axed 28 of 61 planned departing passenger flights amid uncertainty over even tighter Covid-19 regulations for aircrew.

The live departure flight page for Hong Kong International Airport, the world’s busiest international air cargo hub, showed Cathay had pulled flights to destinations that included Australia, Britain and Japan, with aircrew expected to face tougher quarantine measures.

Cathay staff at the airport. The airline has come under increasing pressure from changing travel rules amid the pandemic. Photo: Dickson Lee
Cathay staff at the airport. The airline has come under increasing pressure from changing travel rules amid the pandemic. Photo: Dickson Lee

Of 15 cargo-only flights, five, including to Japan, mainland China and India, were scrapped, with one further delayed by 24 hours. No cargo flights were cancelled on Wednesday, and none have been dropped for Friday.

More passenger flights have been cancelled for Friday, however. As of 7pm on Thursday, the airline had dropped seven flights for the next day, including six long-haul trips initially set for departure between midnight and 1.30am.

Compared with Wednesday, the airline only cancelled seven passenger flights.

The perceived threat of the Omicron coronavirus variant, which scientists fear may be more transmissible than the current dominant strain, has prompted the Hong Kong government to toughen already strict arrival rules. Authorities bumped up more than a dozen countries to the Group A high-risk category, meaning the maximum 21 days of quarantine for travellers, and 14 for aircrew.

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