Published on December 20, 2025

Severe weather conditions have wreaked havoc on air travel, with significant flight cancellations and delays across multiple Asian countries. Airlines like Saudia, Air Arabia, Royal Jordanian, and Egypt Air have been forced to ground dozens of flights, affecting thousands of passengers. While weather-related disruptions are a common occurrence in global aviation, the recent spate of cancellations across these airlines highlights the broader issue of the airline industry’s vulnerability to unpredictable weather events.
Based on the flight data from Saudia, Air Arabia, Royal Jordanian, and Egypt Air, a total of over 50 flights were impacted by the cancellations, affecting a wide range of routes between major cities across Asia and the Middle East.
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Here is the table listing the cancelled flights for Saudia, Air Arabia, Royal Jordanian, and Egypt Air:
| Ident | Type | Origin | Destination | Scheduled Departure Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SVA1524 | A321 | Tabuk Regional (TUU / OETB) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 02:05PM +03 |
| SVA573 | A321 | Abu Dhabi Int’l (AUH / OMAA) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 03:10PM +04 |
| SVA1527 | A321 | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Tabuk Regional (TUU / OETB) | Fri 02:15PM +03 |
| SVA1789 | A20N | Gizan Regional (GIZ / OEGN) | King Abdulaziz Int’l (JED / OEJN) | Fri 02:25PM +03 |
| SVA1389 | A20N | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | al-Jouf Domestic (AJF / OESK) | Fri 02:35PM +03 |
| SVA1915 | A321 | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Ta’if Regional (TIF / OETF) | Fri 02:45PM +03 |
| SVA1036 | B773 | King Abdulaziz Int’l (JED / OEJN) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 03:10PM +03 |
| SVA1173 | A321 | King Fahd Int’l (DMM / OEDF) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 03:10PM +03 |
| SVA1768 | A20N | King Abdulaziz Int’l (JED / OEJN) | Gizan Regional (GIZ / OEGN) | Fri 03:40PM +03 |
| SVA1077 | A20N | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | King Abdulaziz Int’l (JED / OEJN) | Fri 03:45PM +03 |
| SVA634 | A20N | Queen Alia Int’l (AMM / OJAI) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 03:50PM +03 |
| SVA328 | A20N | Sharm El Sheikh (SSH / HESH) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 03:00PM EET |
| SVA1787 | A20N | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Gizan Regional (GIZ / OEGN) | Fri 04:05PM +03 |
| SVA1675 | A330 | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Abha Regional (AHB / OEAB) | Fri 04:05PM +03 |
| SVA1460 | A20N | Prince Mohammad Bin Abdulaziz (MED / OEMA) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 04:10PM +03 |
| SVA1808 | A20N | Gizan Regional (GIZ / OEGN) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 04:10PM +03 |
| SVA1115 | A20N | King Fahd Int’l (DMM / OEDF) | King Abdulaziz Int’l (JED / OEJN) | Fri 04:10PM +03 |
| SVA418 | A330 | Cairo Int’l (CAI / HECA) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 03:15PM EET |
| SVA1672 | A20N | Abha Regional (AHB / OEAB) | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Fri 04:15PM +03 |
| SVA510 | A20N | King Khalid Int’l (RUH / OERK) | Kuwait Int’l (KWI / OKKK) | Fri 04:15PM +03 |
| Ident | Type | Origin | Destination | Scheduled Departure Time |
|---|
| ABY376 | A320 | Damascus Int’l (DAM / OSDI) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 02:05PM +03 |
| ABY530 | A320 | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Tribhuvan Int’l (KTM / VNKT) | Fri 03:15PM +04 |
| ABY358 | A320 | Erbil Int’l (EBL / ORER) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 02:30PM +03 |
| ABY181 | A320 | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz Regional Airport (ELQ / OEGS) | Fri 03:30PM +04 |
| ABY833 | A320 | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Basrah Int’l (BSR / ORMM) | Fri 03:45PM +04 |
| ABY510 | A321 | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Shahjalal International Airport (DAC / VGHS) | Fri 03:45PM +04 |
| ABY547 | A320 | Jinnah Int’l (KHI / OPKC) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 04:55PM PKT |
| ABY121 | A320 | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Kuwait Int’l (KWI / OKKK) | Fri 04:30PM +04 |
| ABY392 | A320 | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Salalah (SLL / OOSA) | Fri 04:35PM +04 |
| ABY466 | A320 | Indira Gandhi Int’l (DEL / VIDP) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 06:30PM IST |
| ABY103 | A320 | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Bahrain Int’l (BAH / OBBI) | Fri 05:05PM +04 |
| ABY301 | A320 | Heydar Aliyev Int’l (GYD / UBBB) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 05:15PM +04 |
| ABY336 | A320 | Queen Alia Int’l (AMM / OJAI) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 04:40PM +03 |
| ABY443 | A320 | Thiruvananthapuram Int’l (TRV / VOTV) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 07:25PM IST |
| ABY118 | A320 | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Seeb Int’l (MCT / OOMS) | Fri 05:55PM +04 |
| ABY245 | A320 | Zvartnots Int’l (EVN / UDYZ) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 06:05PM +04 |
| ABY834 | A320 | Basrah Int’l (BSR / ORMM) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 05:25PM +03 |
| ABY521 | A320 | Shah Amanat Int’l (M.A. Hannan Int’l) (CGP / VGEG) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 08:45PM +06 |
| ABY104 | A320 | Bahrain Int’l (BAH / OBBI) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 06:00PM +03 |
| ABY393 | A320 | Salalah (SLL / OOSA) | Sharjah Int’l (SHJ / OMSJ) | Fri 07:00PM +04 |
| Ident | Type | Origin | Destination | Scheduled Departure Time |
|---|
| RJA437 | E295 | Queen Alia Int’l (AMM / OJAI) | Damascus Int’l (DAM / OSDI) | Fri 03:09PM +03 |
| RJA438 | E295 | Damascus Int’l (DAM / OSDI) | Queen Alia Int’l (AMM / OJAI) | Fri 05:03PM +03 |
| Ident | Type | Origin | Destination | Scheduled Departure Time |
|---|
| MSR704 | B738 | Malpensa Int’l (MXP / LIMC) | Cairo Int’l (CAI / HECA) | Fri 01:35PM CET |
| MSR669 | B738 | Cairo Int’l (CAI / HECA) | King Abdulaziz Int’l (JED / OEJN) | Fri 07:00PM EET |
| MSR670 | B738 | King Abdulaziz Int’l (JED / OEJN) | Cairo Int’l (CAI / HECA) | Fri 11:10PM +03 |
| MSR663 | A333 | Cairo Int’l (CAI / HECA) | King Abdulaziz Int’l (JED / OEJN) | Fri 11:30PM EET |
Severe weather conditions have disrupted air travel in the Middle East and Asia, with major airlines such as Saudia, Air Arabia, Royal Jordanian, and Egypt Air canceling numerous flights. The impact of these cancellations is being felt across key airports, affecting not only passengers but also the local tourism economies that rely heavily on air travel. Thousands of passengers are stranded, and with communication between airlines and passengers at times falling short, frustration has been growing.
The most significant disruptions occurred at high-traffic airports across the Middle East. Saudia’s home base, King Khalid International Airport (RUH) in Riyadh, King Abdulaziz International Airport (JED) in Jeddah, and King Fahd International Airport (DMM) in Dammam were heavily impacted, affecting both domestic and international travelers. Similarly, Sharjah International Airport (SHJ) saw multiple cancellations, which further disrupted air travel across UAE and Saudi Arabia.
Royal Jordanian flights were hit hard at Queen Alia International Airport (AMM) in Amman and Damascus International Airport (DAM). Meanwhile, Cairo International Airport (CAI), a hub for Egypt Air, faced its share of cancellations, significantly affecting routes to Jeddah and Riyadh, as well as international destinations like Malpensa in Italy.
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Air travel across the Middle East was most severely disrupted, with Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the UAE, and Egypt being the primary regions affected. Saudi Arabia’s internal flights between Riyadh and Jeddah, alongside key international routes to destinations like Cairo, Amman, and Gizan, were disrupted. Passengers traveling from Sharjah to Egypt, Kuwait, India, and Kathmandu were left stranded due to weather-related cancellations.
Royal Jordanian’s network within Jordan and Syria also saw cancellations, stranding many travelers heading to key destinations like Damascus, Cairo, and Riyadh. The Egyptian airline saw key routes between Egypt and Saudi Arabia, along with flights connecting Cairo to Italy, heavily affected.
For passengers, the flight cancellations brought on by severe weather have been nothing short of a nightmare. With little to no timely updates from airlines, travelers found themselves stranded in overcrowded airports for hours, facing uncertainty about the status of their flights. Business professionals missed important meetings, while tourists were left wondering whether they would miss out on once-in-a-lifetime experiences in places like the Pyramids of Egypt or Mecca in Saudi Arabia.
Many airlines, including Saudia, Air Arabia, Royal Jordanian, and Egypt Air, attempted to ease the situation by offering meal vouchers, hotel accommodations, and the option to reschedule flights. However, these efforts often fell short of passenger expectations, especially with the lack of communication or proactive steps to notify travelers of their delayed or canceled flights in advance.
The impact of these flight cancellations extends beyond passengers, affecting the local economies that rely heavily on tourism revenue. Cities like Cairo, Jeddah, Riyadh, Amman, and Sharjah depend on international tourism for economic growth. Egypt, in particular, relies heavily on air travel to bring in visitors to key attractions such as the Great Pyramids and Luxor. The cancellations have led to a temporary halt in tourism flows, with many travelers forced to delay their visits to the most iconic landmarks in the region.
Saudi Arabia’s tourism industry also faced setbacks, as disruptions to flights between Jeddah and Riyadh impacted pilgrims traveling for religious purposes, as well as business travelers. Jordan, a hub for tourists visiting historical sites like Petra, felt the sting of cancelled flights, leaving visitors with little recourse but to cancel their trips entirely.
In the UAE, the tourism industry faced disruption as well, particularly with flights from Sharjah being heavily affected. The city, a popular gateway for international tourists, saw a significant reduction in air traffic, which contributed to a decline in the number of travelers heading to its famous shopping malls and luxurious resorts.
As we navigate this era of unpredictable weather, here are some practical tips for travelers to minimize the impact of cancellations:
Despite the massive challenges faced by the tourism industry, the future is not without hope. Airlines, airports, and governments can work together to create more resilient infrastructures, enhancing communication systems and contingency planning for unforeseen weather disruptions. Additionally, improving flexibility with rebooking policies and offering immediate relief such as meal vouchers and hotel accommodations can go a long way in ensuring that passengers feel more supported during tough times.
Innovative technology solutions, such as advanced weather forecasting and real-time flight tracking systems, can also play a vital role in mitigating disruptions. Airlines can better plan for potential weather-related problems and provide passengers with options to rebook or even reroute their flights.
By embracing these strategies, the tourism industry can bounce back stronger and more resilient, ensuring that future disruptions do not dampen the spirit of travel.
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Tags: Air Arabia delays, Egypt Air Disruptions, flight disruptions, Royal Jordanian cancellations, Saudia cancellations
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Saturday, December 20, 2025
Saturday, December 20, 2025