Dubai Airports scaling up operations after UAE airspace fully restored

Dubai Airports is scaling up operations and increasing flight movements after UAE airspace was fully restored, CEO Paul Griffiths said Monday. Over the past two months, Dubai's airports safely supported more than six million passengers and 32,000 aircraft movements despite regional airspace constraints.
Dubai Airports is scaling up operations and increasing flight movements after UAE airspace was fully restored, CEO Paul Griffiths said Monday. "Now that UAE airspace is fully restored, we are scaling up operations and increasing flight movements in line with available regional routing capacity," Griffiths said in a LinkedIn post.
Operational resilience
He said maintaining stability across Dubai's airports over the past two months required "constant adaptation" as the aviation hub worked to keep global journeys moving safely despite major constraints on regional airspace. Since late February, Dubai International Airport (DXB) and Dubai World Central (DWC) have safely supported more than six million passengers, over 32,000 aircraft movements, and more than 213,000 tons of essential cargo.
Global transfer hub
Griffiths said a significant share of international transfer traffic moves through the Middle East, with 22.4 million annual passenger journeys passing through DXB, accounting for one-third of transfer traffic through airport hubs in the region. This makes stability at Dubai's airports critical to maintaining global travel flows.
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Coordination and agility
The airport's operational continuity was made possible through coordination across the oneDXB community, including airline partners, service providers, control authorities, and commercial partners. Griffiths noted that operational continuity under pressure depends not only on infrastructure but also on disciplined execution, clear communication, and collective response.
Conflict context
The restrictions were imposed after the US-Israel war on Iran began in late February, disrupting regional air routes and forcing airlines to adjust schedules across the Gulf. A ceasefire remains in place, but tensions persist.
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