Snowstorms And Strikes Paralyze European Air Travel

Europe’s air travel network faced a perfect storm of disruption on February 15 and 16, 2026, as snowstorms and labor action collided to create chaos for hundreds of thousands of travelers. From Amsterdam to Frankfurt, Paris to London, airports struggled to keep up as weather and strikes forced the cancellation of more than 700 flights and delayed over 5,000, according to reporting by multiple European outlets.

It all began with a band of snow sweeping east across Benelux and into Germany, as noted by Eurocontrol, the European air traffic management organization. The impact was immediate and severe: Amsterdam Schiphol Airport, one of the continent’s busiest hubs, saw approximately half its scheduled flights for Sunday either delayed or cancelled. By 6:30 p.m. CET, airlines operating at Schiphol had cancelled 119 departures and 98 arrivals, with delays affecting hundreds more flights. KLM, the Dutch flag carrier and Schiphol’s largest operator, was hit especially hard, with 147 cancelled flights and 102 delays, mostly on short-haul routes within the Schengen area.

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