A320 left on the tarmac
Credit : Shutterstock, Phuong D. Nguyen
In a dramatic escalation of aviation safety concerns, thousands of Airbus A320-family aircraft worldwide faced grounding orders on Saturday, November 29 after regulators demanded immediate repairs to avert risks from intense solar radiation. The crisis, provoked by a US flight incident, has torn up global flight schedules, stranding passengers during peak holiday travel. Here’s what happened on this chaotic Saturday.
Regulators demand immediate Airbus A320 groundings over solar risks
The European Union Aviation Safety Agency EASA issued an Emergency Airworthiness Directive late Friday evening, ordering software updates or hardware swaps on up to 6,500 A320 jets. That is half the global fleet of A320s, before midnight GMT. This followed an Airbus alert warning how solar flares could scramble flight controls. EASA’s official X post stressed: “Safety is paramount,” warning of potential disruptions . Failure to comply limits planes to empty “ferry flights” to maintenance hubs, effectively sidelining passenger operations.
Widespread cancellations: How many Airbus A320 flights were hit on Saturday?
The directive has already disrupted over 375 airlines in 110 countries, impacting roughly 6.2 million daily passengers on A320 routes. Worldwide, experts estimate 200-300 cancellations on November 29 alone, with delays pushing into the thousands as mechanics race against the clock.
In Europe, the fallout was milder: about 50-60 flights scrapped, mainly short-haul hops from carriers like Air France (35 affected) and easyJet (2-5). British Airways and Wizz Air reported zero cancellations after overnight tweaks. Most unfixed planes, over 90 per cent of Europe’s 2,500 A320s, flew anyway ignoring the warnings, under a grace period until 23:59 GMT, minimising chaos at airports like Heathrow and CDG.
The solar glitch explained: Why ground A320s now?
At its core, the issue boils down to “fly-by-wire” tech in A320s, where pilots’ commands zip through computers like the Elevator Aileron Computer (ELAC) to steer elevators and ailerons controlling primarily the up and down motion of the plane.
Intense solar radiation, streams of charged particles from sun flares, can corrupt the electronics holding this data, causing uncommanded dives or rolls. In a nightmare scenario, it could push the jet beyond structural limits, risking mid-air breakup. Regulators insisted on groundings to preempt disaster, especially during 2025’s solar maximum, when outbursts peak.
Panic traces back to October 30, when JetBlue Flight 1230 from Cancun to Newark suddenly plunged at 35,000 feet, injuring 15 aboard and forcing a Tampa emergency landing. Autopilot stayed on, but the brief drop exposed the ELAC B L104 software’s vulnerability to radiation spikes.
Unpacking the technical flaw: From solar particles to plane plunge peril
Delving deeper into the issue, solar radiation packs protons and electrons that zaps avionics at cruising altitudes, where Earth’s shield is thinner. Airbus’s analysis pinpointed ELAC versions L104 as culprits: during the JetBlue scare, which had corrupted inputs and triggered a “limited pitch-down event,” causing the plane to dive unexpectedly, creating zero gravity in the cabin, and throwing passengers from their seats. The fix? A three-hour job on each plane according to Airbus guidelines.
Could recent ‘cannibal solar storms’ be the hidden culprit?
This comes amid 2025’s fiery sun, marked by “cannibal solar storms“—fast coronal mass ejections (CMEs) that devour slower ones en route to Earth, supercharging geomagnetic chaos. A November 12 “cannibal” event, the strongest in 20 years, blacked out radios and jiggled GPS, even postponing NASA launches. Earlier September flares lit auroras over 18 US states. Did one of these beasts amplify the JetBlue glitch? Experts say it’s possible, urging investigations into space weather’s aviation blind spots. As fixes roll out by mid-December, one question lingers: Is the sun’s rage rewriting our skies?
Disruptions are expected to continue into Sunday.


