Call for UK air traffic control chief to be stripped of bonuses

Nats warned about the quality of its plans to deal with technical failures - report

People wait at Terminal 5 of Heathrow Airport after dozens of flights were cancelled. Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA Wire
People wait at Terminal 5 of Heathrow Airport after dozens of flights were cancelled. Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA Wire

A British MP has called for bonuses to be “stripped” from the chief of air traffic control after an unprecedented systems failure at the UK’s national air traffic control centre.

The problem, involving computer code written a quarter of a century ago, was responsible for widespread disruption at British airports.

Richard Deakin, chief executive of Nats, the company responsible for controlling British airspace, said the software glitch was "buried" among millions of lines of code at the site in Swanwick, Hampshire.

“I hope after the chaos, which was dreadful, though a rare event, he will have his bonuses stripped from him,” LAbour MP Paul Flynn told the Sunday times.

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Mr Deakin earns more than £1 million (€1.25m) after receiving a 45 per cent pay rise this year, according to The Sunday Times.

Nats warned

Meanwhile, Nats was reportedly warned about the quality of its plans to deal with technical failures.

The Independent on Sunday said Nats gave the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) a report earlier this year following major disruption caused by a communications problem last December.

The CAA said “themes on avoiding a recurrence” were a “good first step but lack detail and clarity”, the newspaper reported.

Passengers faced travel problems as dozens of flights at airports around Britain were disrupted or cancelled on Friday and early Saturday.

About 40 flights at Heathrow were cancelled before 9.30am, after which the airport said normal service was resumed.

British transport secretary Patrick McLoughlin described the disruption as unacceptable, and MP Louise Ellman, chairwoman of the transport committee, said Mr McLoughlin will be asked about the incident when he appears before the panel on Monday.

Mr Deakin told the BBC: “The problem was when we had additional terminals brought into use and we had a software problem that we haven’t seen before which resulted in the computer which looks after the flight plans effectively going off line.

“The good news is of course that everything came back online 45 minutes later, the back-up plans went into action as they should have done, so everything performed normally there, the skies were kept safe.

“Unfortunately there was reduced capacity and I would just like to reiterate our apology that we have made to passengers and indeed to airlines and airport customers for the disruption that was caused.

“But I think the key message is that the skies were kept absolutely safe during that 45 minutes of problems that we experienced at Swanwick.”

Mr Deakin added that it was a “very unusual event” which had not occurred before.

He said: “The challenge is that we have around 50 different systems at Swanwick and around four million lines of code. This particular glitch was buried in one of those four million lines of code.”

Mr Deakin said the problem had been “effectively rectified”, and gave assurances that it would not reoccur.

He conceded that some of their systems were “fairly elderly”, adding: “The system we had a problem with last night has code written in the early ‘90s.”

Nats is investing a “huge amount” in new technology, Mr Deakin said, with £575 million (€725m) set to be spent over the next five years to move towards more resilient, internet-based systems.

Nats said it understood the problem was connected to a number of workstations “in a certain state” combined with the number of “air space sectors” open.

Officials restricted air space in response to the issue, leaving flights at some airports grounded on Friday.

Nats declared that its systems were back to full operational capacity on Friday night, but a knock-on effect was seen at airports yesterday.

Gatwick airport said there had been 16 cancellations and seven diversions of inbound flights on Friday but said the airport was running normally yesterday.

Airports as far north as Aberdeen and Edinburgh were also affected by the computer problem. Other airports that reported delays on Friday included Manchester, Stansted and Luton.

PA