SINGAPORE, April 13, 2026, 20:27 SGT
On Monday, key Asian air hubs ran smoothly, with no evidence of the kind of widespread disruption some travel headlines hinted at. Cirium FlightStats pages showed minimal delays at Tokyo Haneda, Singapore Changi, Bangkok, Delhi, Jakarta, and Dubai. Shanghai Pudong was still flagged at low status—and falling.
That’s significant, since travelers in Asia aren’t facing a sweeping airport shutdown—instead, they’re navigating airline schedule reductions, rerouted flights to avoid dangerous or restricted airspace, and scattered weather warnings. Heathrow on Monday reported a 51.1% plunge in March traffic to the Middle East, while traffic from Asia-Pacific jumped 31.1%. The airport’s chief executive, Thomas Woldbye, said they’re doing “everything we can” as routes and demand shift. Reuters
Emirates continues to run fewer flights, even with some regional airspace back open. Dubai Airports, in a separate update, flagged that flights at both DXB and DWC faced cancellations and delays following the temporary partial closure of UAE airspace.
The view from Japan was less broad. JAL reported no affected airports in Japan or Asia on its April 13-14 bad-weather roster, but flagged all Guam flights for April 14-15 as cancelled, citing Typhoon Sinlaku. It also maintained a Middle East operations advisory.
Plenty of carriers haven’t restored Gulf service yet. Singapore Airlines is keeping its Singapore-Dubai route off the board until at least May 31, and Cathay Pacific’s Dubai operations are on hold through June 30. Etihad, for its part, notes it’s ramped up to roughly 80 destinations as it moves through its phased restart.
Right now, it’s not just airport congestion—fuel and route planning are weighing just as heavily. Jet fuel typically stands as the number two expense for airlines, right behind labour. IATA Director General Willie Walsh warned that getting jet fuel supplies back on track could take “months,” even if ships can move freely through Hormuz again. Reuters
The burden won’t hit every airline the same way. Nathan Gee, who leads Asia-Pacific transportation research at Bank of America, pointed out that low-cost carriers “get squeezed the most” when fuel prices jump. Subhas Menon, the Association of Asia Pacific Airlines chief, added that tight jet fuel supplies are piling on “significant cost,” with longer flight paths putting extra strain on both crews and schedules. Reuters
If Gulf disruptions worsen, India stands to feel the heat. According to Reuters, Dubai has capped foreign airlines at a single daily flight through May 31—news delivered in letters seen by the agency on Friday. That move has jolted Indian carriers hardest, since they’d lined up more Dubai flights than any other country’s airlines. And just last week, India’s airport tariff authority slashed certain domestic landing and parking fees by 25%—temporarily—trying to give airlines some breathing room.
So, the network remains uneven—not outright fractured. Still, Walsh’s alert on fuel and JAL scrapping Guam flights because of the typhoon are reminders: local snags can escalate quickly, spreading disruption further.