Published on
June 17, 2026
Image generated with Ai
Severe weather conditions and operational strain have triggered widespread aviation disruption across Asia and parts of the Middle East. Airlines are struggling to maintain normal schedules as persistent heavy rainfall, low visibility, and unstable atmospheric conditions affect multiple international hubs. Indonesia, China, India, Thailand, and the United Arab Emirates are among the most impacted regions, where airport operations have been slowed by weather-linked safety restrictions and congestion. As a result, major carriers including China Eastern, UTair, Citilink, Qatar Airways, Tibet Airlines, and several regional operators are experiencing significant schedule 5,976 delays and 555 cancellations. Key aviation hubs such as Jakarta, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Delhi, Bangkok, and Dubai are facing cascading delays and operational bottlenecks.
Flight movements are being repeatedly adjusted to ensure passenger safety, leading to prolonged waiting times and disrupted connections. The situation reflects a broader regional aviation challenge driven by extreme weather patterns and tightly interconnected air traffic networks across Asia and beyond.
Widespread Aviation Disruptions Hit Asia as Torrential Rain System Intensifies
Severe weather conditions driven by persistent torrential rainfall across southern China have triggered widespread aviation disruption across Asia, impacting major international and domestic airports. The operational strain is reflected in both rising cancellations and delays as airport capacity has been reduced by unstable weather conditions, reduced visibility, and weather-linked safety restrictions.
Across the full dataset covering Asian airports and selected Middle Eastern hubs, the region has recorded a combined 555 flight cancellations and 5,976 flight delays, highlighting the scale of disruption affecting passengers across China, Indonesia, India, Thailand, Hong Kong, and Gulf transit hubs.
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Major Airport Impact Analysis Across Asia
China Becomes the Epicentre of Operational Pressure
China remains the most heavily affected aviation market, with multiple mega hubs reporting high disruption volumes. Shenzhen Bao’an International Airport recorded the highest delays at 691, signalling significant congestion and operational slowdown. Similarly, Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport (470 delays, 35 cancellations) and Beijing Capital International Airport (396 delays, 58 cancellations) are under sustained pressure.
In Beijing, both major airports are heavily impacted. Beijing Capital (PEK) and Beijing Daxing (PKX) together reflect a combined system-wide disruption exceeding 800 delays, indicating deep network-level strain across the capital region.
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Shanghai is also significantly affected, particularly Shanghai Pudong International Airport (244 delays, 12 cancellations) and Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport (184 delays, 16 cancellations), reflecting congestion across both international and domestic traffic flows.
Other major Chinese hubs including Chengdu, Kunming, Xi’an, Chongqing, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Qingdao, Xiamen, and Harbin all report sustained disruption levels, showing that the weather system has impacted aviation networks nationwide.
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Southeast Asia and South Asia Experience Secondary Disruption Wave
Outside China, Southeast Asian airports are also facing operational instability. Hong Kong International Airport (306 delays, 4 cancellations) and Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport (194 delays, 4 cancellations) show significant spillover disruption from regional weather and traffic rerouting.
In Indonesia, Soekarno-Hatta International Airport (158 delays, 28 cancellations) and Juanda International Airport (17 delays, 2 cancellations) reflect moderate but persistent disruption.
India’s Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi (211 delays, 5 cancellations) is also impacted, indicating that regional connectivity and weather-linked operational constraints are affecting South Asian aviation corridors.
Island and Secondary Airports Show Localised but Persistent Disruption
Secondary airports such as Haikou, Sanya, Ningbo, Jinan, Changsha, and Dalian continue to experience lower but consistent disruption levels, showing how the weather system has penetrated beyond primary aviation hubs into secondary domestic networks.
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Smaller regional airports such as Chifeng and Yinchuan Helanshan report minimal cancellations but still reflect operational sensitivity to broader system instability.
Airline Performance Breakdown Across Asia
Chinese Carriers Bear the Highest Operational Load
Chinese airlines dominate the disruption statistics, with China Eastern Airlines (93 cancellations, 408 delays) and Air China (74 cancellations, 334 delays) recording the highest combined impact.
China Southern Airlines stands out with the highest delay volume in the airline dataset at 531 delays, despite relatively moderate cancellations (17), indicating severe schedule cascading across its network.
Other Chinese carriers such as Hainan Airlines, Shenzhen Airlines, Spring Airlines, and XiamenAir are also heavily impacted, reflecting nationwide systemic disruption across domestic and international operations.
Regional and International Airlines Also Affected
Low-cost and regional carriers such as AirAsia, Batik Air, Lion Air, Citilink, and SpiceJet show moderate disruption levels, indicating broader Southeast Asian exposure to weather and congestion effects.
Full-service international carriers including Cathay Pacific, Emirates, Qatar Airways, Air India, ANA, and Pakistan International Airlines are also affected, largely due to network dependency on Chinese and Southeast Asian hub connectivity.
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Total Asia-Wide Disruption Summary
Across all reported Asian airports and airlines:
- Total Flight Cancellations: 555
- Total Flight Delays: 5,976
These figures reflect a significant regional aviation stress event, primarily driven by sustained meteorological instability in southern China and cascading operational impacts across interconnected Asian air traffic networks.
Passenger Impact and What Travellers Can Do Now
Passengers across Asia are experiencing extended waiting times, missed connections, and schedule uncertainty due to widespread delays and cancellations.
Recommended Passenger Actions
Travellers affected by disruptions are advised to:
- Monitor airline notifications for real-time schedule updates
- Reconfirm onward connections before travelling to the airport
- Allow additional transit time due to congestion and rescheduling
- Check rebooking and refund policies offered by airlines
- Avoid non-essential travel where possible during peak disruption windows
Airlines are prioritising re-accommodation on alternative flights, but capacity constraints across major hubs mean extended delays may continue until weather conditions stabilise.
Conclusion: Weather-Driven Network Instability Across Asia
The current disruption wave across Asia highlights the vulnerability of highly interconnected aviation networks during sustained extreme weather events. With southern China’s torrential rain system acting as the primary catalyst, cascading delays have extended across Southeast Asia, South Asia, and Gulf transit hubs, creating one of the most widespread operational slowdowns in recent regional aviation activity.
Source: FlightAware and Affected Airports
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