The airline, which operates six daily flights from Heathrow, has rejected the new limits and called them “entirely unreasonable and unacceptable.”
“[London Heathrow] chose not to act, not to plan, not to invest. Now faced with an ‘airmageddon’ situation due to their incompetence and non-action, they are pushing the entire burden — of costs and the scramble to sort the mess — to airlines and travelers,” the airline said in a statement.
The company said that Heathrow had given it only 36 hours to comply with the new cap, and had threatened legal action against airlines that refuse to comply. It added that it had enough ground handling and catering staff to handle its flights at the airport.
Emirates said that Heathrow’s management team were “cavalier about travelers and their airline customers,” and had failed to rehire and train enough staff in advance of the predictable surge in summer travel.
On average, Heathrow handled nearly 220,000 passengers each day, split between arrivals and departure, in 2018.
A spokesperson for Heathrow told CNN Business that a major cause of delayed flights and cancellations was a lack of airline ground handling teams, which it said are only staffed at 70% of pre-pandemic levels.
“For months we have asked airlines to help come up with a plan to solve their resourcing challenges, but no clear plans were forthcoming and with each passing day the problem got worse,” the spokesperson said.
Heathrow CEO John Holland-Kaye said in an open letter to passengers on Tuesday that airlines had sold too many seats for the coming months.
“Daily departing seats over the summer will average 104,000 — giving a daily excess of 4,000 seats. On average only about 1,500 of these 4,000 daily seats have currently been sold to passengers,” he said in the letter.
Blame game
Emirates said that it would be “impossible” to rebook all potentially impacted passengers onto new flights over the next few weeks.
It said that the 100,000 daily cap on the number of departing passengers was a figure that “appear[ed] to [have been] plucked from thin air,” and it would continue to operate its flights as planned.
It’s not just Emirates that is angry.
“Airlines have been predicting stronger traffic than Heathrow has been predicting … they clearly got it completely wrong,” he said.
Walsh also accused Heathrow of trying to “maximize the profitability that they get from the airport at the expense of airlines.”
Heathrow rejected Walsh’s comments.
“What we need is collaborative working and investment in services to protect passengers, not ill-informed comments from retired airline bosses,” a spokesperson told CNN Business on Wednesday.
— Sharon Browne-Peter contributed reporting.