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Easter travel chaos looms as air woes combine with rail maintenance and fallout


Those planning an Easter getaway are facing the prospect of a tricky, and likely more expensive journey, than they were hoping for.

There is disruption for ferries to France amid the fallout from the P&O sackings scandal, airports are struggling to cope with higher demand and, to cap it all, there are big engineering works planned on the railways.

Here, Sky News takes a look at how each major area for travel is shaping up as the holiday rush gathers speed.

Ferries

The loss of many P&O Ferries services is tipped to have a major impact over the Easter period.

There has been a gaping hole in capacity, especially for popular cross-Channel services, since P&O found itself in hot water over its decision to make almost 800 seafarers redundant via a video message last month.

That is because some ships with their new crews have failed safety checks while others have been unable to run.

She will not sail across the North Sea again until at least after the holiday, leaving only the Pride of Rotterdam in service.

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Investigations opened into P&O

Crucially, an agreement that meant rival DFDS would carry P&O passengers is coming to an end.

From Friday, its regular services to and from Dover or Newhaven to France will be unable to take P&O customers.

DFDS told Sky News it could simply not extend the 14-day deal because its ships were already full.

“As we look towards the weekend and Easter, we have very high booking levels, which sadly means we won’t have any spare capacity available for other operators.

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P&O boss: Hard ‘but necessary decision’

“We will of course do everything we can outside the peak weekends to carry as many P&O customers as possible.”

Its statement added: “We are adding extra sailings where we can, and have also been able to move some traffic to our new unaccompanied route from Sheerness to Calais to help relieve the congestion in and around the port.”

P&O Ferries said it was getting ready to resume services on “a number of vital routes”, adding that it has been working with regulators to make sure the ships are safe to sail.

Two of the vessels – Pride of Kent and Spirit of Britain – are expected to be ready to sail between Dover and Calais by next week, subject to regulatory sign-off.

The European Causeway is also expected to sail between Larne and Cairnryan, along with the Pride Of Hull between Hull and Rotterdam.

A spokesperson said: “For those customers still affected by wider disruption, we are providing refunds to all passengers booked to travel with us to whom we have not been able to provide alternative services.

“Customers can contact our customer service team by email or phone for a refund. Anyone who has had their trip disrupted with P&O will also receive a free trip to be used on a future journey with us, that can be taken later in the year.

“We thank our customers for their patience during this time and we apologise to those customers whose journeys have been cancelled and disrupted.”

The Eurotunnel Shuttle Freight from Britain to France is seen in Coquelles near Calais, northern France, after France barred all people coming from the United Kingdom, for 48 hours from Sunday night, over fears of a new strain of the coronavirus, amid the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in France, December 22, 2020
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Eurotunnel’s Easter holiday season began last week

So could Eurostar or Getlink, which owns the Eurotunnel service, take some of the strain?

A spokesperson for Getlink said its Easter holiday season began last Friday and runs for three weeks, adding: “We have very high bookings for the coming weekend and the next on our passenger service, and bookings continue to flow in.

“We will be running up to four departures per hour at peak travel times to make sure everyone can travel.

“Our truck shuttles are also running with very high volumes, with additional departures being made available to carry the extra traffic.

“Services are running well for both passenger and freight, without additional waiting time on our terminals.

“Traffic congestion in Kent at this time is the result of the absence of three P&O ferries from the short straits route during the busiest period of sustained cross-Channel traffic since 2019.”

Airports

Disruption at airports and for airlines has been a theme of the past week as Easter holidays began in some parts of the country and for many private schools.

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Queues for Manchester Airport security

The main issue is one of staffing, with both clearly unable to handle the pick-up in demand they have seen in the run-up to Easter following the damage inflicted by the pandemic.

Passenger numbers at airports will swell this weekend and into the following week, though the…



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