Historic US storm cancels over 13,400 flights, cuts power
Monster winter storm paralyses eastern United States with heavy snowfall, ice accumulation and dangerously frigid temperatures affecting over 18 crore people
Desk Report
| Published: Sunday, January 25, 2026
File photo
More than 13,400 flights were cancelled across United States
(US) as a historic winter storm battered the country, leaving over 2 lakh 17
thousand customers without power and threatening nearly 18 crore people with
heavy snow, ice and freezing temperatures.
Flight tracking website FlightAware reported over 4,000 US
flights cancelled on Saturday, with more than 9 thousand 400 Sunday flights
also scrapped. Sunday's cancellations represent the highest single-day total
since the COVID pandemic, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium.
President Donald Trump approved federal emergency disaster
declarations in 12 states including South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee,
Georgia, North Carolina, Maryland, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi,
Indiana and West Virginia. Seventeen states and District of Columbia declared
weather emergencies.
"It's going to be very, very cold. So we'd encourage
everybody to stock up on fuel, stock up on food, and we will get through this
together," Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said at a
news conference Saturday afternoon.
Power outages surged to 2 lakh 17 thousand customers by 2 am
EST Sunday, predominantly in Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas and Tennessee,
according to PowerOutage.com. Department of Energy issued emergency orders authorizing
Electric Reliability Council of Texas to deploy backup generation resources at
data centers and major facilities.
National Weather Service warned of unusually expansive and
long-duration winter storm bringing widespread heavy ice accumulation across
Southeast, with "crippling to locally catastrophic impacts" expected.
Forecasters said damage, especially in ice-pounded areas, could rival hurricane
destruction.
Life-threatening wind chill readings plunged below minus 45
degrees Celsius in North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota. Meteorologist
Jacob Asherman warned exposure without proper clothing 'can lead to
hypothermia very, very quickly.'
Southern Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee faced worst
conditions with ice up to 2.5 centimeters thick coating tree limbs, power lines
and roadways. Storm system was expected to dump over 30 centimeters of snow
across heavily populated mid-Atlantic and northeastern states.
Dallas temperatures plummeted to minus 6 degrees Celsius,
while Houston mayor urged residents to hunker down for 72 hours. Snow already
recorded 15 centimeters in Oklahoma and Arkansas.
Major airlines including Delta, JetBlue and United warned
passengers about abrupt flight changes. Delta relocated cold-weather experts to
support de-icing and baggage teams at southern airports. JetBlue cancelled
approximately one thousand flights through Monday.
Dominion Energy said if ice forecast holds, this could rank
among largest-ever winter events affecting utility operations in Virginia, home
to world's largest data center collection.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani urged residents to avoid
travel. New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill announced commercial vehicle travel
restrictions and 56 kilometers per hour speed limit on highways.
"This is a mean storm. It's the biggest storm so far
this season in terms of intensity and scope," Asherman told media.
Source: Reuters, Al Jazeera