Delta just suspended China flights for longer than any other airline, a red flag as the unprecedented coronavirus wreaks havoc on the airline industry

by
https://static.businessinsider.sg/2020/01/01/5e34471a62fa811b82140722.png
A Delta Air Lines Boeing 767.Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto/Getty

Delta Air Lines said on Friday that it was suspending all its flights to China, becoming the first US airline to suspend all its routes to the country.

Delta’s suspension, from February 6 to April 30, is also the longest announced by any airline to date.

American Airlines also announced on Friday that it would cancel all China flights beginning immediately. Earlier this week, the airline said it would cancel only some of its flights to China from February 9 to March 27.

American Airlines’ pilots’ union filed a lawsuit on Thursday to stop all flights to and from China amid the outbreak.

United Airlines said on Tuesday that it would cancel 24 flights over the first week of February, but several days later it said it would cancel an additional 332 flights from February 9 to March 28. The airline said it would run four daily flights to mainland China and Hong Kong, down from its usual 12.

The temporary halting of China flights across the airline industry reflects plummeting demand as people and businesses rethink travel to China amid the coronavirus outbreak.

Ken Herbert, an analyst at the financial-services firm Canaccord Genuity, said on Tuesday that the outbreak posed a “substantial” risk to airlines.

Earlier this week, federal health officials expanded coronavirus screenings to 20 US airports. The government also evacuated diplomatic staff from Wuhan, China, the center of the outbreak.

More than 9,700 people have been infected with the virus, and at least 213 people have died. The virus is believed to have originated in the city of Wuhan but has been found throughout China and spread to more than 20 other nations, including the US.