Dense winter fog across north India has once again disrupted air travel through the national capital, prompting Air India to activate its FogCare policy for flights departing from Delhi. The move allows passengers to reschedule journeys or seek refunds without penalties, reflecting how extreme weather events are reshaping operational planning at India’s busiest aviation hub and influencing business mobility across the region.Â
Weather agencies forecast near-zero visibility conditions during early morning hours, a recurring winter pattern that regularly constrains aircraft movement at Indira Gandhi International Airport. While the airport is equipped with advanced landing systems that permit operations in low visibility, airline schedules remain vulnerable to cascading delays when aircraft rotations, crew duty limits and international connections are affected. For a network carrier such as Air India, these disruptions can ripple far beyond Delhi.
The Air India FogCare policy has been positioned as a passenger-protection mechanism during predictable weather stress periods. Aviation officials indicate that affected travellers are being alerted through direct digital communication channels, allowing them to adjust plans before reaching the airport. Operational teams have also been instructed to manage passenger flows with priority given to international connections, where missed departures can trigger visa, accommodation and project-cost implications.For businesses operating across multiple Indian cities, fog-related uncertainty in Delhi has become a logistical risk that requires active management. Corporate travel planners and relocation specialists increasingly build buffer days into winter itineraries, or reroute staff through airports such as Mumbai or Bengaluru, which are less exposed to severe fog. While such detours can increase journey time, they often reduce the risk of extended ground delays that affect productivity and costs.
Urban mobility experts point out that repeated winter disruptions highlight broader infrastructure and climate challenges. Fog intensity in the Indo-Gangetic Plain has been linked to a mix of meteorological factors, emissions and land-use patterns. As climate variability increases, transport systems designed for historical norms are being pushed to adapt. Airlines, airports and city authorities are now under pressure to coordinate more closely, not only in aviation operations but also in surface connectivity, where road congestion can compound weather-related delays.
Airport operators have advised passengers to factor in additional travel time due to seasonal traffic restrictions and security arrangements in the capital. These overlapping constraints illustrate how weather resilience is not limited to runways alone but extends across the urban transport network.
Looking ahead, the growing reliance on policies such as Air India FogCare suggests that flexibility is becoming a core feature of winter travel planning rather than an exception. For Delhi and other climate-sensitive cities, the challenge will be to align aviation resilience with broader urban sustainability goals reducing emissions, improving predictability and ensuring that people and commerce can continue to move safely even as weather extremes become more frequent.
Air India FogCare eases Delhi winter disruptions