
Air-quality monitors registered PM10 readings up to ten times the legal limit across Cyprus on 2 February 2026 as a dense Saharan dust plume blanketed the island. Authorities advised residents—especially vulnerable groups—to remain indoors and mandated employers to review outdoor-work protocols.
While the phenomenon is seasonal, the intensity of this episode raises operational questions for airlines and ground-handling companies. Fine dust can reduce visibility below take-off minima and accelerate engine-compressor wear, leading carriers to dispatch additional inspection crews or adjust fuel burn calculations. In past severe dust events, Larnaca Airport has experienced rolling departure gaps of up to 45 minutes.
Travel managers with time-critical assignments in or out of Cyprus should monitor NOTAMs and keep travellers informed of possible knock-on delays. Companies relocating sensitive equipment should review cargo insurance clauses; airborne particulates can infiltrate packing crates during loading if ramp dwell times lengthen.
Should last-minute itinerary changes trigger the need for fresh travel documents, VisaHQ’s Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/) can help corporate mobility teams secure visas, resident permits and other consular services quickly, reducing administrative friction while they focus on dust-related logistics.
Meteorologists expect the dust to dissipate overnight as upper-level winds veer northwest. Nonetheless, the episode underscores the importance of including environmental disruptions—alongside geopolitical risks—in global-mobility contingency planning for the Eastern Mediterranean.
While the phenomenon is seasonal, the intensity of this episode raises operational questions for airlines and ground-handling companies. Fine dust can reduce visibility below take-off minima and accelerate engine-compressor wear, leading carriers to dispatch additional inspection crews or adjust fuel burn calculations. In past severe dust events, Larnaca Airport has experienced rolling departure gaps of up to 45 minutes.
Travel managers with time-critical assignments in or out of Cyprus should monitor NOTAMs and keep travellers informed of possible knock-on delays. Companies relocating sensitive equipment should review cargo insurance clauses; airborne particulates can infiltrate packing crates during loading if ramp dwell times lengthen.
Should last-minute itinerary changes trigger the need for fresh travel documents, VisaHQ’s Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/) can help corporate mobility teams secure visas, resident permits and other consular services quickly, reducing administrative friction while they focus on dust-related logistics.
Meteorologists expect the dust to dissipate overnight as upper-level winds veer northwest. Nonetheless, the episode underscores the importance of including environmental disruptions—alongside geopolitical risks—in global-mobility contingency planning for the Eastern Mediterranean.










