Vietnam Airlines Cancels Flights Due to Jet Fuel Shortage
By Reuters | 23 Mar, 2026
Flight cancellations are likely to spread across southeast Asia if the Iran conflict continues to prevent oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz.
Flag carrier Vietnam Airlines plans to cancel 23 flights per week across several domestic routes from April because of looming jet fuel shortages, Vietnam's aviation authority said.
The majority of Vietnam's jet fuel demand is met by imports, and the war in the Middle East is disrupting supply.
Vietnam Airlines, part of state-owned Vietnam Airlines Corp, is prioritising routes critical to national connectivity, trade, tourism, diplomacy and domestic travel, the CAAV said in a statement issued late on Monday.
From April 1, it will suspend seven domestic routes and cancel 23 flights a week to conserve fuel, including services from Hai Phong to Buon Ma Thuot, Cam Ranh, Phu Quoc and Can Tho, and from Ho Chi Minh City to Van Don, Rach Gia and Dien Bien, the statement added.
Vietnam Airlines did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Reuters previously reported that the CAAV had warned of potential flight reductions from April after China and Thailand halted jet fuel exports because of the war in Iran, raising the risk of shortages.
Vietnamese airlines are preparing to implement fuel surcharges on international routes from early April, the authority added.
(Reporting by Phuong Nguyen; Editing by John Mair)
Recent Articles
- US, Iran Float Another Ceasefire Deal Framework After Latest Exchange of Fire
- How and When Flying Cars Will Change American Life
- China to Build AI Token Futures Market in Race with US
- US Weekly Jobless Claims Increase Slightly Amid Low Layoffs
- US PCE Inflation Shot Up in April
- BYD Steps up Push of 'God's Eye' Assisted Driving System
- Costlier Flights, Hotels Make Summer Travel K-Shaped
- ByteDance Developing Custom CPU Chips to Support Agentic AI Rollout
- IBM to Invest $10 Billion for Large-Scale Quantum Computer by 2029
- Small Biotech Firms Quicker to Adopt AI Than Big Ones
