The United Airlines terminal on July 19, 2024 as a global technology outage affected LAX airport in Los Angeles.
Myung J. Chun | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images
Flight cancellations and delays continued on Saturday as airlines worked to recover from a global IT outage sparked chaos at airports and for other industries a day earlier.
More than 1,800 flights were canceled on Saturday, with over 1,200 of them in the United States, according to flight-tracking site FlightAware. More than 3,700 U.S. flights were delayed.
On Friday, more than 5,000 flights were canceled worldwide, with about 3,400 in the U.S. Over 12,000 U.S. flights were delayed.
The disruptions were similar to severe weather like a winter or tropical storm but airlines had no time to prepare for the outage, leaving them scrambling to accommodate customers ahead of a summer weekend.
A software update from CrowdStrike that went awry led to a major outage of Microsoft systems for businesses around the world.
“I am proud of our teams across the globe who worked around the clock today to safely get our operation back on track and care for our customers after the most disruptive technology outage in history,” said United Airlines COO Toby Enqvist in a statement late Friday. “While we had to cancel and delay far more flights than we ever want to, we are poised to return to a near-normal operation on Saturday.”
About 11% of United’s mainline flights were canceled on Saturday, down from 22% on Friday, according to FlightAware data. Delta Air Lines canceled about 17% of its Saturday flights, an improvement from 31% a day earlier.
Airlines waived fare differences and fees for affected customers.
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