Published on
June 16, 2026
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Asia’s aviation network is facing severe operational stress as widespread weather instability and cascading air traffic congestion disrupt major international routes. Heavy rainstorms, flooding conditions, and convective weather systems across parts of China have triggered large-scale scheduling breakdowns across multiple airports. As a result, airlines operating dense regional and long-haul networks have been forced to cancel 588 and delay 6,064 flights, creating significant travel uncertainty for passengers across key hubs in East and Southeast Asia. Major airports in Beijing, Kuala Lumpur, Tokyo, New Delhi, Istanbul, and Dubai are experiencing persistent delays as inbound and outbound traffic is repeatedly rerouted or held due to safety constraints. Airlines including Shenzhen Airlines, AirAsia, Batik Air, Garuda Indonesia, Korean Air, and Emirates are among those affected by the disruption wave. Consequently, travellers are facing extended waiting times, missed connections, and limited rebooking options as operational pressure continues to build across the regional aviation system.
Total Scale of Disruption Across Asia
Combined Operational Impact
- Total Cancellations: 588
- Total Delays: 6,064
The overwhelming majority of disruptions are concentrated in East and Southeast Asia on 16th June, where extreme rainfall and flooding conditions have pushed multiple aviation hubs into sustained disruption cycles.
Weather Conditions Driving Aviation Breakdown in China
Flooding and River Level Breaches Across 20 Rivers
The primary trigger behind the aviation disruption is extreme weather activity across China. Authorities confirmed that 20 rivers have exceeded warning levels, mainly small and medium-sized waterways, following continuous heavy rainfall across southern and northeastern regions.
This has created widespread waterlogging conditions affecting airport access roads, runway drainage systems, and ground handling infrastructure.
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Persistent Rainstorms Across Guangdong and Surrounding Regions
Southern China, particularly Guangdong Province and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, has been experiencing continuous rainstorms and severe convective weather.
Rainfall accumulation has reached 100–300 mm, with local peaks exceeding 600 mm. These conditions have significantly affected major aviation hubs such as Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and nearby secondary airports.
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National Meteorological Emergency Escalation
China’s meteorological authorities escalated alerts in response to worsening conditions:
- Rainstorm emergency response raised from Level IV to Level III
- Level II Orange Rainstorm Alert issued
- Severe convective weather warnings maintained
These escalations directly impacted airport operations, forcing capacity reductions, rerouting, and extended holding patterns.
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Airports, Cities and Countries Most Affected – Aviation Breakdown Analysis
China – Core Epicentre of Global Disruption
China represents the most severely impacted country in this dataset, with multiple mega-hubs reporting extreme congestion:
- Shenzhen Bao’an International (SZX): 99 cancellations, 747 delays
- Guangzhou Baiyun (CAN): 41 cancellations, 556 delays
- Beijing Capital (PEK): 34 cancellations, 313 delays
- Beijing Daxing (PKX): 61 cancellations, 284 delays
- Shanghai Pudong (PVG): 261 delays
- Hangzhou Xiaoshan (HGH): 254 delays
Secondary airports across Chengdu, Chongqing, Kunming, Nanjing, Wuhan, and Xi’an also report significant operational strain, indicating a nationwide network disruption rather than isolated incidents.
Southeast Asia and East Asia Spillover Impact
Beyond China, disruption has extended across key regional hubs:
- Jakarta Soekarno-Hatta (CGK): 27 cancellations, 170 delays
- Kuala Lumpur International (KUL): 7 cancellations, 190 delays
- Hong Kong International (HKG): 147 delays
- Tokyo Haneda (HND): 111 delays
- Indira Gandhi International (DEL): 180 delays
These figures reflect ripple effects from disrupted air traffic flows originating in China’s congested airspace.
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Middle East Network Pressure Points
While not the epicentre, Middle Eastern hubs also show steady disruption accumulation:
- Istanbul Airport: 152 delays
- Abu Dhabi International: 117 delays
- Dubai International: 78 delays
- King Abdulaziz International: 34 delays
- King Khalid International: 31 delays
These delays are largely linked to inbound scheduling disruptions from Asia-Pacific corridors.
Airline Performance Under Operational Stress
Most Affected Airlines
Airlines operating dense China and intra-Asia networks are experiencing the highest disruption levels:
- China Eastern: 67 cancellations, 516 delays
- China Southern Airlines: 49 cancellations, 561 delays
- Hainan Airlines: 49 cancellations, 206 delays
- Air China: 36 cancellations, 300 delays
- Shenzhen Airlines: 18 cancellations, 324 delays
- XiamenAir: 8 cancellations, 200 delays
Regional carriers such as AirAsia, Batik Air, and Citilink also face moderate disruption due to network interconnectivity.
International carriers including Emirates, Etihad Airways, Japan Airlines, Korean Air, and Air India are experiencing secondary delays due to schedule knock-on effects.
What Affected Passengers Can Do Now
Immediate Passenger Actions
Travellers across affected routes should take the following steps:
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- Check airline status updates frequently due to rapid schedule changes
- Reconfirm connections, especially via Chinese hub airports
- Allow extended transit time at transfer airports
- Rebook flexible tickets where possible
- Avoid non-essential travel through severely affected hubs such as Shenzhen, Guangzhou, and Beijing
Travel Planning Advice
Given ongoing weather instability:
- Prioritise morning departures where operational delays are lower
- Monitor airline apps for real-time re-routing options
- Keep digital copies of travel documents for fast rebooking support
- Prepare for extended waiting times at major hub airports
Outlook: Continued Disruption Likely Across Asia
With flooding still affecting river systems and rainstorm alerts active across southern China, aviation operations are expected to remain unstable in the short term. The combination of waterlogged infrastructure, reduced airport capacity, and air traffic congestion suggests that delays will continue across China and neighbouring aviation networks until weather systems stabilise and river levels recede below warning thresholds.
Source: FlightAware and Affected Airports
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