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British Airways technology chaos will cost £80m | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The IT meltdown that grounded thousands of British Airways passengers will cost the airline at least £80m, it has emerged. | |
Willie Walsh, chief executive of BA owner International Airlines Group, told investors its initial assessment of the gross cost "is in the order of £80m". | |
He promised to provide an update with more details when appropriate. | |
The chaos was triggered by an engineer who disconnected a power supply. | |
The major damage was caused by a surge when it was reconnected. | |
Speaking at IAG's annual meeting in Madridon Thursday, Mr Walsh apologised again for last month's chaos, describing it as a "dreadful experience". | |
About 75,000 passengers faced severe disruption when BA's system failed over the Bank Holiday weekend. | |
Mr Walsh said BA was "working hard to ensure that affected passengers are compensated as soon as possible". | |
He had previously announced an independent investigation "to learn from the experience". | |
During the outage, the GMB, a union which represents aviation workers, claimed the problems had been caused by BA making IT staff redundant and outsourcing the department last year. | |
Mr Walsh said on Thursday: "What we do know at this stage, however, is that this failure had absolutely nothing to do with changes to the way we resource our IT systems and services." | |
IAG chairman Antonio Vazquez said: "You can be reassured that we will do everything in our powers to avoid similar problems in the future and restore our customers' faith in British Airways." | |
BA was one of several airlines affected by a baggage system problem at Heathrow on Thursday morning. | |
Hundreds of passengers on flights operated by IAG-owned Iberia, as well as BA and American Airlines at terminals 3 and 5 had to fly out without their luggage. | |
Heathrow said the problem has now been fixed and apologised. |
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