
Brazil’s two most important business-travel corridors suffered fresh turbulence on 6 January when LATAM, GOL and Azul cancelled six high-profile services. Thunderstorms over the Southeast combined with post-holiday crew-rostering gaps forced airlines to scrub two Santos-Dumont–Congonhas shuttle flights and long-haul links from São Paulo/Guarulhos to Miami and Amsterdam.
Data from flight-tracking platform Cirium show that the cancellations removed more than 1,000 premium-cabin seats just as expatriates and trade-fair delegates were returning to Brazil after the holidays. KLM’s KL 792—one of only three daily non-stops between Brazil and the Netherlands—was among the casualties, leaving shippers of high-value pharma and tech components scrambling for belly-cargo alternatives.
Airlines blamed a “perfect storm” of weather diversions, crew sick-leave spikes and the ripple effects of North American winter disruptions. GOL and LATAM have re-timed certain rotations and are offering fee-free rebooking, but travel-management companies say inventory in business class will remain tight for the next week.
Should re-routing force travellers to pass through an unexpected third country, VisaHQ can streamline any last-minute transit or entry formalities. Their online platform (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/) provides rapid visa checks and processing support so mobility teams can secure the right documents in hours—a valuable safety net when flight options change at short notice.
Corporate mobility teams should advise travellers to build buffer days into itineraries and to consider remote participation for meetings tied to the first full business week of the Brazilian calendar. Companies with time-sensitive cargo may want to shift to dedicated freighters or route via Santiago or Bogotá until schedules stabilise.
The episode underlines the fragility of Brazil’s air network during the southern-summer storm season and could accelerate calls for a dedicated third runway at Congonhas to relieve pressure on the shuttle.
Data from flight-tracking platform Cirium show that the cancellations removed more than 1,000 premium-cabin seats just as expatriates and trade-fair delegates were returning to Brazil after the holidays. KLM’s KL 792—one of only three daily non-stops between Brazil and the Netherlands—was among the casualties, leaving shippers of high-value pharma and tech components scrambling for belly-cargo alternatives.
Airlines blamed a “perfect storm” of weather diversions, crew sick-leave spikes and the ripple effects of North American winter disruptions. GOL and LATAM have re-timed certain rotations and are offering fee-free rebooking, but travel-management companies say inventory in business class will remain tight for the next week.
Should re-routing force travellers to pass through an unexpected third country, VisaHQ can streamline any last-minute transit or entry formalities. Their online platform (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/) provides rapid visa checks and processing support so mobility teams can secure the right documents in hours—a valuable safety net when flight options change at short notice.
Corporate mobility teams should advise travellers to build buffer days into itineraries and to consider remote participation for meetings tied to the first full business week of the Brazilian calendar. Companies with time-sensitive cargo may want to shift to dedicated freighters or route via Santiago or Bogotá until schedules stabilise.
The episode underlines the fragility of Brazil’s air network during the southern-summer storm season and could accelerate calls for a dedicated third runway at Congonhas to relieve pressure on the shuttle.










