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Airports must plan for snow storms: EU

Thousands of Russians jump in ice holes for holiday
Zaozyorye, Russia (AFP) Jan 19, 2011 - Tens of thousands of Russians jumped into holes cut in ice on Monday night and Tuesday morning on the holiday of the Epiphany, when Russian Orthodox believers take part in a baptism ceremony. Russians stripped to swimsuits or loose robes to plunge into cross-shaped holes cut in frozen rivers, believing that the water takes on sacred powers on the holiday, which commemorates the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist. The head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, held an all-night service in Moscow's Yelokhovsky cathedral and on Tuesday morning blessed water, which believers collect in bottles, crediting it with healing powers.

"I feel like a new man," exclaimed Nikolai Ivanov, 42, as he vigorously toweled himself off after plunging into a cross-shaped ice hole in Zaozyorye, 60 kilometres (37 miles miles) east of Moscow. Church spokesman Vladimir Legoida warned believers only to jump into the freezing water after consulting a doctor, the RIA Novosti news agency reported, as temperatures fell below 30 degrees Celsius in Siberia. But many believers seemed entirely ignorant of the cold, wearing little but huge smiles as they took part in an ancient rite that has passed on through the generations since the early tsarist times. "The cold is one of the best gifts you can give a Russian," said Dmitry Chulkov, 25, while pulling on his boots after a particularly spectacular dive. "We are all a little crazy," he later admitted.

Father Sergei, who oversees the local church, observed the hundreds of brave believers with an air of satisfaction. "This is good for both their bodies and their souls," he said. In Moscow around 58,000 people gathered to jump in ice holes overnight, far exceeding last year's total of 32,000 people, city police spokesman Viktor Biryukov told RIA Novosti. The Church estimates that hundreds of thousands of believers take part in the ceremony across the country each year. Rescue workers at the emergency ministry manned 46 officially sanctioned ice holes in Moscow, where the temperature was minus 15 degrees Celsius on Tuesday morning.
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) Jan 19, 2011
The European Commission warned airports on Wednesday of looming regulation to prevent a repeat of the Christmas travel chaos and demanded to see battle plans for next winter.

European transport commissioner Siim Kallas held a meeting with top executives from the biggest airports after December snow forced passengers to sleep at terminals when tens of thousands of flight were cancelled.

"Volcanic ash is difficult for the aviation industry to predict, but we know that winter arrives every year and we should be ready for it," Kallas said, referring to the Icelandic volcano eruption in April that closed much of Europe's airspace.

"If you have 30 centimetres of snow suddenly in central Europe it is something very exceptional. But if you have one centimetre of snow and you still have announcements that flights are cancelled, this I consider unacceptable," he said.

The transport commissioner urged airports to prepare winter contingency plans and make them public by October, adding that one key issue to correct is the lack of information provided to passengers.

At the same time, Kallas said he would add a proposal to ensure airports provide a minimum service during a weather crisis to a package of legislation on liberalising the industry, which will be presented this summer.

But he ruled out any legislation that would allow passengers to sue airports in such situations, saying the system provides for people to seek redress through their airlines which in turn seek compensation from airports.

Thousands of people were forced to sleep at airports, including in London, Paris and Brussels, last December after a range of snow-related problems, from runways not being ploughed to ground crew running out of de-icing liquid.

The commission said 35,000 flights were cancelled last month -- more than for the whole of 2009.

At the height of the snow crisis in December, Kallas had summoned airport officials to explain themselves in Brussels, blasting their handling of the travel chaos as "unacceptable."

He met on Wednesday with senior executives from companies that operate airports including Paris, Frankfurt, London's Heathrow and Amsterdam's Schiphol.

Kallas said a meeting with representatives from the entire aviation industry, from airports to airlines and ground handling services, would be held in March to discuss how to share risks and responsibilities.

Last week, British airports operator BAA which operates six airports in Britain including Heathrow, said the recent harsh wintry weather had cost the company 24 million pounds (29 million euros, $38 million).

Heavy snow and thick ice all but closed Heathrow, the busiest international passenger air hub in the world, exacting a humble apology from BAA chief executive Colin Matthews.

BAA has set up an independent inquiry into the poor performance of its Heathrow operations last month. The findings are due in March.

The Association of European Airlines said the snow chaos, coupled with strikes and the volcano ash crisis, had put the brakes on the industry's recovery last year.



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British airports firm BAA says snow chaos cost 24 million Pounds
London (AFP) Jan 12, 2011
British airports operator BAA said on Wednesday that the recent harsh wintry weather, which sparked travel chaos, had cost it about 24 million pounds ($38 million). The Spanish-owned firm, which operates six airports in Britain, was widely criticised over its handling of the freezing weather conditions that gripped much of Britain over the crucial Christmas holiday period. "A ... read more







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