Cathay Pacific says pilot flying-hour caps, illness led to flight cuts

BLOOMBERG

Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd, grappling with flight cancellations over the holiday period that have frustrated passengers, acknowledged that pilots reaching or at their 12-month limit on flying hours had contributed to the problem. While there were “elevated sickness rates on certain days,” the airline’s director of flight operations said in a memo that many had hit or come close to the cap of 900 block hours
on a rolling 12-month basis, which meant “there is much less flexibility around the deployment of pilots on Reserve and days off.”
Cathay cancelled 9% of the 126 planned departures from Hong Kong on December 30, 2023, airport data showed. The airline axed another six flights December 31. Its representatives did not respond to requests for comment outside business hours.
“This has been an extremely challenging time for us,” Chris Kempis wrote in the memo to pilots seen by Bloomberg News. He called the confluence of factors a “learning point
for us and it’s on me to ensure that we don’t see a repeat of the same circumstances going forward.” Hong Kong has seen a resurgence of travel after more than three years of strict Covid-era restrictions. That has put a strain on the city’s flagship carrier to ramp up operations, after curtailing flights and cutting jobs amid the pandemic.
The carrier is contending with a shortfall of cockpit crew. Pilots on staff now stand at 2,532, according to Hong Kong Aircrew Officers Association data, a 35% drop from the end of 2019.
Cathay operated nearly 8% more flights per day on average over the Christmas and New Year period compared to its typical schedule. Some pilots have had to accept multiple flight swaps and work on their guaranteed days off designed to give them appropriate time off to rest, Kempis wrote. “We are still very much in our rebuild phase,” he added.

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