Solutions / Disruption Management
Chaos has a pattern.
We read it.
Delays, cancellations, disruptions: every day they cost your airport thousands of euros. Our system cross-references weather, operational and air-traffic data in real time. It warns you hours ahead, so you decide calmly.
The problem you know well
Disruption doesn't warn you. But it always leaves traces.
Asuddenthunderstorm,atransportstrike,abaggagesystemfailure,anATFCMregulationthattriggerscascadingdelays.Everytimethescenarioisthesame:theoperationsroomendsupchasingevents,reorganisingstaff,reallocatinggatesandmanagingalreadyfrustratedpassengers.Thecostisn'tjustfinancial.It'sreputational,operationalandhuman.
Decisions taken too late
When the problem is already visible, options narrow and costs rise. Redeploying staff in an emergency costs twice as much as planning it 4 hours ahead.
Scattered data, no big picture
Weather data is on one screen, AODB data on another, road traffic on a third. Nobody cross-references them automatically. Important correlations get lost.
Costs that could have been avoided
Operational delays, overtime staff, gates reassigned at the last minute, passengers to rebook. Every event handled in an emergency is an event that could have cost less.
How it works, in practice
The system cross-references everything you currently look at separately.
Imagineknowingthatin5hoursfogwillreducerunwaycapacityby40%,thatEUROCONTROLhasjustactivatedaregulationthatwillbring12delayedflights,andthatanaccidentonthemotorwayisslowingthearrivalofthenextshift'shandlingstaff.Thesystemtellsyouallofthisonasinglescreen,withaclearindicationofwhattodo.
Collects data from every source, in real time
AODB (flights, gates, turnaround), EUROCONTROL (regulations, network delays), weather (forecasts up to 240 hours), road traffic (airport access times), news (strikes, events, incidents).
Cross-references them and finds the signals that matter
The artificial intelligence learns from your airport's history. It knows that when it rains heavily and there's a regulation on Milan, the average turnaround extends by 18 minutes and Terminal 1 gates become saturated. This isn't a hand-written rule: it's a pattern the system learned from your data.
Tells you what to do, before it happens
It doesn't send you a generic weather alert. It tells you: "In 4 hours, high probability of T1 gate saturation. Suggestion: move 3 flights to remote stands and activate 2 additional buses." You decide whether to follow the advice or not. But you do it calmly, not in an emergency.
Why it pays off
What changes for your airport.
Decide hours ahead, not minutes
The system alerts you with windows from 30 minutes to 48 hours. The more time you have, the better the decisions and the lower the cost of every intervention.
Reduce disruption costs
Staff planned rather than on overtime. Gates reassigned with logic, not in an emergency. Passengers informed beforehand, not after. Every anticipated action is a concrete saving.
Less frustrated passengers
A well-managed delay is very different from one that's simply endured. If you realign resources before the peak, the passenger doesn't feel the disruption you would have had without the system.
Your airport becomes more reliable
Airlines notice who manages disruption better. A hub that reacts in advance attracts more flights, more routes and more trust from operational partners.
The sources
Where the information comes from.
Thesystemconnectstothedatasourcesyourairportalreadyusesandintegratesthemwithexternalproviders.Itdoesn'treplaceyoursystems:itmakesthemsmarter.
Technical specifications