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5 of the worst travel crisis the world has seen since 2020

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Mar 3, 2026, 18:06 IST
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5 of the worst travel crisis the world has seen since 2020

Air travel was once seen as the ultimate symbol of global connectivity, a system so vast and technologically advanced that it seemed almost unbreakable. But since 2020, that illusion has shattered repeatedly. From a pandemic that grounded nearly every aircraft on Earth to system meltdowns, airline management failures and geopolitical flashpoints that redrew flight paths overnight, modern aviation has endured shock after shock. Here are the most major travel disruptions since 2020, events that didn’t just delay flights, but brought entire systems to their knees.

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The global shutdown during COVID-19: 2020–2022

Nothing in modern aviation history compares to what happened in early 2020. As COVID-19 spread across continents, governments sealed borders, suspended visas, imposed lockdowns, and grounded fleets at a scale never seen before. At the peak of the crisis international passenger traffic collapsed by over 60 percent, entire airport terminals shut down, aircraft were parked in deserts and on unused runways worldwide, millions of travellers were stranded abroad. It wasn’t just some unfortunate hiccup. It was a total global shutdown. The industry lost hundreds of billions of dollars. Major airlines required government bailouts to survive. Even after borders reopened, travel remained tangled in testing rules, vaccination requirements, and sudden bans. The pandemic didn’t just disrupt travel, it fundamentally reshaped how the world moves. No wonder nowadays the world simply says “pre/post pandemic.”

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The US winter storm and Southwest Airlines meltdown: December 2022

During the Christmas travel rush of 2022, a brutal winter storm swept across the United States. While several airlines were affected, the real crisis unfolded at Southwest Airlines. The carrier’s outdated crew scheduling system collapsed under pressure. Pilots and cabin crew were left out of position, communication systems failed, and recovery efforts spiralled out of control. Over several days more than 16,000 flights were cancelled, thousands of passengers were stranded during the holiday season, and airports were filled with unclaimed baggage. It quickly became one of the worst airline-specific operational breakdowns in US aviation history

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UK airspace paralysed by National Air Traffic Services failure: August 2023

In August 2023, a technical glitch at the UK’s air traffic control provider, National Air Traffic Services (NATS), triggered nationwide disruption. The failure restricted the number of flight plans that could be processed, effectively slowing UK airspace to a crawl. Major airports like Heathrow and Gatwick saw hundreds of cancellations and long delays. The disruption spilled into European networks and took days to stabilise. What made this event alarming was its simplicity: a single technical malfunction was enough to paralyse one of the world’s busiest aviation systems.

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The IndiGo scheduling crisis: 2025

India’s largest airline faced one of the country’s most significant aviation disruptions when it struggled to implement revised Flight Duty Time Limitations (FDTL) rules introduced by India’s aviation regulator. The new regulations, designed to improve pilot rest and safety, required changes in crew rostering. IndiGo failed to adequately align staffing and schedules with the new norms. It resulted in severe crew shortages, large-scale cancellations across domestic routes, and widespread passenger disruption across Indian metros. This crisis stemmed from operational planning lapses and management miscalculations in adapting to regulatory changes.

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Middle-East conflict reshaping global air routes: 2023–Present

Escalating tensions involving Israel and Iran have repeatedly disrupted international aviation. Airspace closures, and heightened security advisories forced airlines to suspend services to certain destinations, or simply cancel flights till further notice. The instability continues to inject uncertainty into global air networks and remains an ongoing aviation risk

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Copyright © Jun 8, 2026, 12.01PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service