There were 361 flights either delayed, cancelled or diverted to other regional airports on Sunday, affecting about 65,000 passengers, while numerous other flights were forced to re-route to avoid Philippine airspace.
Flag carrier Philippine Airlines said it was arranging recovery flights out of the United States, Singapore and Malaysia and diverting some flights to domestic airports. Budget carrier Cebu Pacific cancelled 54 domestic flights on Monday.
Chiong said the airport had introduced its own power system in 2018 but on Sunday, both the main and backup systems failed.
When they connected directly to the regular commercial electricity, they experienced over-voltage and power surge, he added, forcing equipment to fail including radar, communications, radio and internet.
The Ninoy Aquino International Airport has previously been ranked among the world's worst international gateways, with flight delays a regular occurrence, and a history of upgrades being delayed or abandoned due to disputes between the airport and contractors.
The Philippines hopes to take pressure off by building multi-billion dollar airports in Manila's surrounding provinces, including Cavite and also in Bulacan, which is due to start operations in 2027.
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMinAFodHRwczovL3d3dy5jaGFubmVsbmV3c2FzaWEuY29tL2FzaWEvcGhpbGlwcGluZXMtbWFpbi1tYW5pbGEtaW50ZXJuYXRpb25hbC1haXJwb3J0LXNjcmFtYmxlcy1yZXN0b3JlLW5vcm1hbGN5LWFmdGVyLXBvd2VyLWN1dC1mbGlnaHQtZGVsYXktY2FuY2VsbGVkLTMxNzgzNjbSAQA?oc=5
2023-01-02 02:50:05Z
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