Gulf carriers resume limited flights, but missile fire fuels uncertainty

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  • Companies

  • Chartered Air France flight from UAE turns back due to missile fire

  • Emirates and Etihad operating limited flight schedules to key global cities

  • Dubai airport operating at about 25% of normal levels, Flightradar24 says

HONG KONG, March 6 (Reuters) - Emirates and Etihad Airways were resuming limited flight schedules to key global cities from their United Arab Emirates ​hubs on Friday, though the ongoing threat of missile fire piled pressure on airlines as they scramble to accommodate travellers.

With most airspace in ‌the Middle East still closed over missile and drone concerns since the start of the U.S.-Israel war against Iran, authorities have been arranging charter flights and securing seats on limited commercial services to evacuate tens of thousands of people.

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A government-chartered Air France (AIRF.PA), opens new tab flight to bring French nationals back from the United Arab Emirates was forced to turn back on Thursday due to missile fire in the ​area, French Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot said.

“This situation reflects the instability in the region and the complexity of repatriation operations,” he said.

Etihad said on Friday ​it would resume a limited flight schedule through March 19. The flights will operate to and from Abu Dhabi and 25 destinations ⁠including London, Paris, Frankfurt, Delhi, New York and Toronto.

As of Thursday, traffic at Dubai airport, normally the world’s busiest, had almost doubled from Wednesday, but remained only about ​25% of normal levels, flight-tracking website Flightradar24 said.

Dubai-based Emirates, one of the UAE’s two flag carriers, said late on Thursday it was operating a reduced flight schedule to ​82 destinations including London, Sydney, Singapore and New York until further notice, and customers transiting in Dubai would only be accepted if their connecting flight was operating.

The limited operations at Middle Eastern hubs have hit travellers on routes from Europe to the Asia-Pacific region particularly hard.

Combined, Emirates, Qatar Airways and Etihad Airways normally fly about one-third of passengers from Europe to Asia and more ​than half of all passengers from Europe to Australia, New Zealand and nearby Pacific Islands, according to Cirium data.

Qatar’s Doha hub remains shut, though it has been arranging ​a limited number of relief flights from Oman and Saudi Arabia.

Data from Cirium showed that from February 28 - when the conflict started - to March 5, there were more than 44,000 flights ‌scheduled in ⁠and out of the Middle East, with more than 25,000 flights cancelled so far.

Flights in and out of Dubai International Airport

JET FUEL PRICES SOAR, SHARES FALL

Higher oil prices have sent jet fuel costs soaring, with Singapore jet fuel reaching a record high of $225 a barrel this week, which traders attributed to concerns about supply shortages from Middle Eastern refiners.

The price eased slightly on Thursday to about $195 a barrel after some profit-taking but remained nearly double that of last week.

Shares of Qantas Airways (QAN.AX), opens new tab fell more than 3% on Friday, Air New Zealand (AIR.NZ), opens new tab was down ​nearly 7%, Hong Kong’s flagship carrier Cathay ​Pacific (0293.HK), opens new tab dropped more than 2%, while ⁠Singapore Airlines (SIAL.SI), opens new tab was down over 1%.

The Hong Kong-listed shares of major Chinese carriers including Air China , China Eastern Airlines , and China Southern Airlines were down between 2% and 4%.

TRAVELLERS DESCRIBE CHAOS IN SCRAMBLE TO LEAVE

Passengers have been forking out huge sums of ​money to get out of the Middle East, with some who managed to travel back by commercial flight on Thursday ​from Oman saying it ⁠had been “absolute chaos” to find their way back home from Dubai.

“We paid 1,500 pounds ($2,005.05) to get across to Muscat (Oman) to get on the plane,” said Ed Short after he arrived at London’s Heathrow Airport on a British Airways flight.

“We’d spent about 20,000 pounds booking Emirates flight instead. So we’re hoping we get those back.”

With the conflict showing little sign of ⁠easing, wider ​aviation and air-cargo disruption looked set to linger.

Saudi budget carrier flynas will run a limited number of flights ​between Saudi Arabia and Dubai starting on Friday.

Skies over Iran and Iraq remain empty on Wednesday

($1 = 0.7481 pounds)

Reporting by Julie Zhu in Hong Kong; Additional reporting by Trixie Yap in Singapore; Writing by Anne Marie Roantree; Editing by Jamie Freed

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Julie Zhu

Thomson Reuters

Julie Zhu is Reuters’ Asia senior financial correspondent, covering finance and dealmaking across the region. Since joining Reuters in 2016, she has reported on capital markets, corporate finance, regulation, private equity and financial institutions, consistently breaking exclusives and delivering in-depth investigative pieces. She was named Reuters’ Reporter of the Year in 2021 and was part of the team awarded Reuters Story of the Year in 2024. She previously worked at the Financial Times covering business and general news about South China and Hong Kong.

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