
Thousands of business and leisure travellers were stranded on 5 January after airlines cancelled 44 flights and delayed a further 583 across at least eight mainland airports, according to industry portal Travel and Tour World. Beijing Capital International recorded 130 delays and ten cancellations, while Shanghai Hongqiao logged 95 delays. Chengdu Tianfu, Kunming Changshui, Nanjing Lukou and Hangzhou Xiaoshan were also heavily affected.
Although aviation authorities have not issued an official explanation, airline operations managers cited lingering winter weather in northern China combined with aircraft repositioning challenges following the New Year travel peak. The disruptions reverberated through corporate schedules, with popular international sectors to Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore reporting knock-on delays of up to four hours.
Whether you need to reroute staff through a different hub at short notice or secure an emergency extension because weather delays have pushed a trip beyond its planned visa validity, VisaHQ can streamline the paperwork. The company’s online platform—https://www.visahq.com/china/—provides fast China visa processing, real-time regulatory alerts and same-day passport services, helping travellers stay compliant even when their itineraries shift unexpectedly.
Under China’s consumer-rights regulations, passengers delayed by more than three hours may request cash compensation or hotel accommodation, but enforcement can vary by carrier. Mobility teams should remind employees to (1) document boarding-pass timestamps, (2) request written delay notices at airline counters, and (3) retain taxi or meal receipts for reimbursement claims. Companies with time-sensitive projects in Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu may consider temporarily routing through Shenzhen, Guangzhou or Wuhan—airports that saw fewer disruptions on 5 January.
On a strategic level, the incident underscores the importance of dual-hub contingency planning now that Chinese air traffic has returned to 90 percent of 2019 levels. Firms running large meeting or training programmes in January should include buffer days and flexible tickets, particularly where weather risks—fog in Chengdu and ice in Beijing—are seasonal.
Although aviation authorities have not issued an official explanation, airline operations managers cited lingering winter weather in northern China combined with aircraft repositioning challenges following the New Year travel peak. The disruptions reverberated through corporate schedules, with popular international sectors to Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore reporting knock-on delays of up to four hours.
Whether you need to reroute staff through a different hub at short notice or secure an emergency extension because weather delays have pushed a trip beyond its planned visa validity, VisaHQ can streamline the paperwork. The company’s online platform—https://www.visahq.com/china/—provides fast China visa processing, real-time regulatory alerts and same-day passport services, helping travellers stay compliant even when their itineraries shift unexpectedly.
Under China’s consumer-rights regulations, passengers delayed by more than three hours may request cash compensation or hotel accommodation, but enforcement can vary by carrier. Mobility teams should remind employees to (1) document boarding-pass timestamps, (2) request written delay notices at airline counters, and (3) retain taxi or meal receipts for reimbursement claims. Companies with time-sensitive projects in Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu may consider temporarily routing through Shenzhen, Guangzhou or Wuhan—airports that saw fewer disruptions on 5 January.
On a strategic level, the incident underscores the importance of dual-hub contingency planning now that Chinese air traffic has returned to 90 percent of 2019 levels. Firms running large meeting or training programmes in January should include buffer days and flexible tickets, particularly where weather risks—fog in Chengdu and ice in Beijing—are seasonal.











