ANALYSIS-More airline outages seen as carriers grapple with aging technology
By Jeffrey Dastin and Jim Finkle
Aug 12 (Reuters) - Airlines will likely suffer more
disruptions like the one that grounded about 2,000 Delta
flights this week because major carriers have not invested
enough to overhaul reservations systems based on technology
dating to the 1960s, airline industry and technology experts
told Reuters.
Airlines have spent heavily to introduce new features such
as automated check-in kiosks, real-time luggage tracking and
slick mobile apps. But they have avoided the steep cost of
rebuilding their reservations systems from the ground up, former
airline executives said.
Scott Nason, former chief information officer at American
Airlines Group Inc, said long-term investments in
computer technology were a tough sell when he worked there.
"Most airlines were on the verge of going out of business
for many years, so investment of any kind had to have short
pay-back periods," said Nason, who left American in 2009 and is
now an independent consultant.
The reservations systems of the biggest carriers mostly run
on a specialized IBM operating system known as
Transaction Processing Facility, or TPF. It was designed in the
1960s to process large numbers of transactions quickly and is
still updated by IBM, which did a major rewrite of the operating
system about a decade ago.
A host of special features, ranging from mobile check-ins to
seat selection and cabin upgrades, are built on top of the TPF
core, or connected to it.
"They have surrounded that old industry infrastructure with
modern technology," said Bob Edwards, United Continental
Holdings Inc's former chief information officer until
2014. "Those systems have to always reach back into the old core
technologies to retrieve a reservation or to figure out who
flies between Dallas and New York City."
When a power outage shuts off that reservations system - as
happened on Monday to Delta Air Lines Inc's "Deltamatic" system
- TPF falls out of sync with the newer technologies that
passenger service agents use to assist travelers, Edwards said.
Airlines are then forced to cancel flights as demands from
stranded customers flood their employees - who meanwhile are
handling bookings on an older platform without their familiar,
modern tools, he said.
Several years ago, it took United six hours to recover from
a test shutdown, thanks to complications with the many add-ons
built atop TPF, Edwards said.
Other recent disruptions include one in July that prompted
Southwest Airlines Co to cancel over 2,000 flights and
two outages last summer at United Continental.
PRESSURE FOR PROFITS
Delta spokeswoman Kate Modolo said in a statement that a
small fire on Monday resulted in a "massive failure" at the
airline's technology center. Delta was forced to cancel flights
because critical systems did not switch over to backup power as
intended, she said.
Reuters sent Delta and other major carriers detailed
questions on TPF infrastructure and their technology
investments.
Modolo did not answer whether Delta relies on TPF, but said
"the functionality of the IT programs we use" was not an issue.
She had no comment on whether Delta had decreased or increased
its spending on back-end technology over the past decade.
"We have a new CIO who has a go-forward plan to ensure Delta
is on the cutting edge of customer service technology while
strengthening our IT infrastructure so that it is reliable,
redundant and nimble," she said in a statement.
Most big airlines, including the four largest in the United
States - American, Delta, United and Southwest - rely on TPF in
some form, industry experts said.
In response to questions from Reuters, those airlines did
not answer whether their aging systems put them at risk of
future disruptions, but all stressed that they are upgrading
their technology and are focused on reliability. Southwest, for
example, said it is in the process of replacing its reservations
system.
Earlier this week, in a video statement, Delta Chief
Executive Ed Bastian said: "Over the last three years, we have
invested hundreds of millions of dollars on technology
infrastructure upgrades and systems including backup systems to
prevent what happened yesterday from occurring. I'm sorry that
it happened."
U.S. and Canadian airlines are projected to spend an average
of 3 percent of their revenue on information technology this
year - compared to 8 percent by commercial banks and 4 percent
by healthcare firms, according to Computer Economics, a firm
that tracks IT spending.
Nason cautioned that comparing technology spending by
airlines to some other industries, including banking, can be
tricky. Banks have lower capital costs and they rely more
heavily on information technology for their core business.
Still, technology experts say that level of spending by the
major airlines is not sufficient, pointing to the recent
failures as evidence.
Part of the challenge is that U.S. airlines are under
pressure from investors to top recent record profits and boost
stock prices, even as economic troubles overseas have reduced
travel demand.
Delta, for example, is looking to boost its operating profit
margin to between 17 percent and 19 percent by 2018. That's up
from last year's margin target of 14 percent to 16 percent.
FEAR OF FAILURE
Airlines have also held off on making major network upgrades
out of fear that systems could fail during the transition,
making them feel that they cannot afford to take them down to
add equipment, install patches and perform other maintenance,
said Gartner analyst Mark Jaggers.
Some consumer groups have called on airlines to do a better
job at planning for disruptions like the one this week at Delta,
which affected hundreds of thousands of passengers over four
days.
"It is unfair to the traveling public that the cost of
under-investment in needed equipment be shifted and placed on
the back of air travelers," said travel consumer advocates Paul
Hudson and Charlie Leocha in a letter to the heads of the U.S.
Transportation Department and U.S. Federal Aviation
Administration on Wednesday.
Henry Harteveldt, founder of the travel consultancy
Atmosphere Research Group, said some airlines are choosing to
risk outages that might cost them $20 million to $40 million
rather than invest, for example, $100 million on technology
upgrades. He believes investors and the general public will
apply increasing pressure on airlines to avoid outages at any
cost.
"We cannot afford, as a nation, for any of our airlines to
be rendered useless by a technology failure," Harteveldt said.
Yet it can be hard to convince airline management that the
cost-benefit analysis justifies the major investments to make
their computer systems truly fail-safe, said Edwards, the former
United chief information officer.
"When fuel prices are low and there's extra cash on hand,
they want to spend it on the cool shiny things like planes and
mobile apps," he said. "Nobody gets excited about the data
center."
(Reporting by Jim Finkle in Boston and Jeffrey Dastin in San
Francisco; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Brian Thevenot)
Reuters
Reuters
08/12/2016 7:49
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