
Germany’s Federal Aviation Office (LBA) has launched a quick-turn safety review after five carriers—including Lufthansa, Ryanair and Singapore Airlines—reported emergency landings or diversions at Munich, Frankfurt, Cologne, Hamburg and Memmingen between January and October. Although no injuries were recorded, yesterday’s summary report highlights recurring issues with bird strikes and engine-temperature alerts.
The LBA is convening a taskforce with EASA to examine runway-wildlife management and ground-handling coordination during turn-arounds. Business-travel insurers say that while such incidents remain rare, they can trigger schedule chaos: Munich’s 12 September diversion stranded two C-suite passengers en route to critical board meetings, resulting in €40,000 in re-booking and delay costs.
Corporate travel managers should verify that tickets are issued on 24-hour changeable fares for senior executives and consider contingency video-conferencing options. The LBA expects to publish interim findings by February 2026; airlines operating more than 100 rotations per week to Germany will be asked to submit additional maintenance data.
The LBA is convening a taskforce with EASA to examine runway-wildlife management and ground-handling coordination during turn-arounds. Business-travel insurers say that while such incidents remain rare, they can trigger schedule chaos: Munich’s 12 September diversion stranded two C-suite passengers en route to critical board meetings, resulting in €40,000 in re-booking and delay costs.
Corporate travel managers should verify that tickets are issued on 24-hour changeable fares for senior executives and consider contingency video-conferencing options. The LBA expects to publish interim findings by February 2026; airlines operating more than 100 rotations per week to Germany will be asked to submit additional maintenance data.







