
Brazilian businesses with operations or clients in Argentina face an abrupt mobility challenge: Argentina’s CGT labour federation has confirmed a nationwide 24-hour strike for Thursday, 19 February, that will include a complete aviation shutdown at Buenos Aires’ Aeroparque (AEP) and Ezeiza (EZE) airports. The warning was issued on 18 February in The Rio Times’ ‘Latin American Pulse’ brief and comes as many Brazilians are preparing post-Carnival returns or onward regional trips.
Pilots, ground handlers and air-traffic technicians will walk out, halting all departures and arrivals for at least 24 hours. Long-distance bus, rail and metro services will also stop, effectively sealing the Argentine capital to surface transport. Brazilian carriers GOL, LATAM and Azul operate multiple daily frequencies to AEP and EZE from São Paulo-Guarulhos and Porto Alegre; they have begun issuing free-change waivers, but aircraft and crews are already stretched by Carnival rotations.
Should itineraries need to change at short notice, VisaHQ can streamline the paperwork. Through its Brazil portal (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/), the service lets travellers and corporate travel managers instantly verify visa or transit requirements for detours via Uruguay, Chile or elsewhere and arrange expedited processing online, reducing a key friction point while airlines and schedules are in flux.
Corporate mobility teams should urgently identify travellers ticketed for Brazil-Argentina sectors between the evening of 18 February and the morning of 20 February. Options include re-routing through Montevideo (MVD) or Santiago (SCL) with onward surface or regional connections once Argentine services resume, or advancing departures to beat the strike clock. Cargo planners moving samples or spare parts between the Mercosur partners should expect at least a 48-hour knock-on delay as backlogs clear.
Beyond immediate logistics, the episode illustrates the interconnected nature of Southern Cone mobility. Brazil’s economic stake in Argentina is significant—more than 220 Brazilian companies maintain a permanent presence there—and labour unrest continues to pose reputational and scheduling risks. While the Argentine strike does not directly involve Brazilian airports, its ripple effects on bilateral business travel and supply chains are substantial and warrant proactive mitigation.
Pilots, ground handlers and air-traffic technicians will walk out, halting all departures and arrivals for at least 24 hours. Long-distance bus, rail and metro services will also stop, effectively sealing the Argentine capital to surface transport. Brazilian carriers GOL, LATAM and Azul operate multiple daily frequencies to AEP and EZE from São Paulo-Guarulhos and Porto Alegre; they have begun issuing free-change waivers, but aircraft and crews are already stretched by Carnival rotations.
Should itineraries need to change at short notice, VisaHQ can streamline the paperwork. Through its Brazil portal (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/), the service lets travellers and corporate travel managers instantly verify visa or transit requirements for detours via Uruguay, Chile or elsewhere and arrange expedited processing online, reducing a key friction point while airlines and schedules are in flux.
Corporate mobility teams should urgently identify travellers ticketed for Brazil-Argentina sectors between the evening of 18 February and the morning of 20 February. Options include re-routing through Montevideo (MVD) or Santiago (SCL) with onward surface or regional connections once Argentine services resume, or advancing departures to beat the strike clock. Cargo planners moving samples or spare parts between the Mercosur partners should expect at least a 48-hour knock-on delay as backlogs clear.
Beyond immediate logistics, the episode illustrates the interconnected nature of Southern Cone mobility. Brazil’s economic stake in Argentina is significant—more than 220 Brazilian companies maintain a permanent presence there—and labour unrest continues to pose reputational and scheduling risks. While the Argentine strike does not directly involve Brazilian airports, its ripple effects on bilateral business travel and supply chains are substantial and warrant proactive mitigation.









