Why summer heat is more likely to ground your flight than cold weather
- High temperatures can be as disruptive to air travel as storms and snow because heat requires more power to get planes airborne
- Book flights in the early morning and avoid checking luggage to minimise your risk of delays
A lightning strike isn’t the most likely way travel plans get snarled. Passengers are learning the hard way this summer that high temperatures can be as disruptive to on-time departures as visibly inclement weather.
This week extreme heat has rippled across much of the world, and it has had an effect on travel. Data from the Federal Aviation Administration in the US show that for many airports, summer weather is responsible for far more delays that winter weather – partially because it takes a less extreme weather event to send operations into a tailspin. Chicago O’Hare International Airport, for instance, had almost twice as many weather delays from June to August 2022 as it did from January to March 2023. At New York’s LaGuardia Airport, there were 35 per cent more weather delays in summer 2022 than the following winter.
How to stay safe and travel smart the next time you go abroad
Additional data from aviation analytics firm FlightAware shows that from January to March 2023 there were 402,881 flight delays in the US – representing 19.6 per cent of all scheduled departures – whereas in the summer months of June to August 2022, there were 544,462 delays, or 23.3 per cent of the country’s flights.
Winter storms can cause more widespread havoc, however. Of a dozen events that caused mass disruptions to US flights in the last 12 or so years, eight stemmed from winter storms and three were related to hurricanes, while the 12th was Covid-19. Heatwaves may not result in large-scale breakdowns in service but are instead a constantly humming engine of daily disruption in which season-long impacts can add up.
“When temperatures exceed 39 degrees Celsius, it becomes really problematic for airlines,” said Bijan Vasigh, professor of economics and finance at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, in the US state of Florida.
Heat thins the air, which reduces the lift that helps planes take off. The hotter the temperature, the more power is required to get airborne.
“The hotter and more humid the surrounding air is, the more aircraft engine and aerofoil performance degrade,” echoed Kathleen Bangs, a former commercial pilot who’s now a spokesperson for FlightAware. “Aircraft get their best performance during cool or cold temperatures as the density of the air increases.”
In hot weather, pilots may decide to delay flights or reduce the weight aboard the aircraft by dumping excess fuel, bumping bags or even taking off some passengers; ultimately, in a game of wait-and-see, they can run into such issues as running out of fuel or exceeding time limits on staff shifts. For passengers, that can mean flight disruptions, route changes or delayed luggage.
Tips for packing a suitcase like a pro
The logic around where heat can ground flights is counterintuitive and doesn’t always correlate to where temperatures are hottest. See famously snowy Denver, in the US state of Colorado: the city has more delays in summer than winter, when comparing only those disruptions that are attributed specifically to weather.
“Elevation also has an effect,” Bangs explains. “Taking off at higher-altitude airports during extreme heat can have [additional] limitations on weight.”
There are ways to avoid these disruptions, even without knowing what’s in the forecast. For one thing, the airport you choose can make a difference. “Older or smaller airports, such as in London City Airport, have shorter runways,” says Vasigh, adding that longer runways allow pilots to accelerate with more power and offset the effects of hot, thin air.
This, he says, is why an airline like Emirates can operate seamlessly in Dubai, where average high temperatures climb to 41 degrees Celsius during the peak summer months. It’s also why Chicago’s O’Hare suffers from a greater proportion of summer disruptions than winter ones, despite the regions relatively mild summer weather and brutal winter storms.
Vasigh adds that flights departing between 11am and 2pm are the most likely to be affected, given midday heat and a lack of shade on tarmacs and runways. Booking in the early-morning hours is a smart way to avoid flight delays, generally speaking, but it also helps mitigate this particular cause.
And avoid checking luggage. When the temperature starts climbing rapidly, airlines can reduce their maximum weight allowance for safe take-off. Since luggage is the last thing loaded onto a plane after passengers board, operations crews can more easily control for weight by reducing the number of checked bags they allow into the cargo hold.