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Delta CEO, in Paris for the Olympics, says outage-related cancellations should end Thursday

As of 2 p.m. Wednesday, 66 Delta flights were still delayed at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport and another 10 were canceled.
USDOT Sec. Pete Buttigieg announced an investigation into Delta's disruptions, which were sparked by a global internet outage last week.

MINNEAPOLIS — Delta Air Lines canceled significantly fewer flights Wednesday, and the airline's chief executive said cancellations and delays stemming from a global technology breakdown should end by Thursday.

The airline issued a message from Ed Bastian to customers while the CEO was in Paris to attend the Summer Olympics.

In the message, Bastian apologized to travelers who had their plans upended. Delta has canceled more than 6,500 flights — far more than any other airline — since key systems were crippled by the technology outage.

Hundreds of flights at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport were either delayed or canceled since the outage. As of 2 p.m. Wednesday, 66 Delta flights were delayed and 10 had been canceled, which is down from the 163 delays and 80 cancellations reported on Tuesday.

“While our initial efforts to stabilize the operations were difficult and frustratingly slow and complex, we have made good progress this week and the worst impacts of the CrowdStrike-caused outage are clearly behind us,” Bastian said.

CrowdStrike is the cybersecurity company whose faulty software update sent to computers running on Microsoft Windows led to grounded flights and disrupted banks, hospitals and retailers starting early Friday.

The U.S. Department of Transportation is investigating why Delta failed to recover as quickly as other airlines. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Tuesday that the department would also examine Delta’s customer service, including “unacceptable” lines for assistance and reports that unaccompanied minors were stranded at airports.

RELATED: Delta customers face canceled flights, long wait times and lost baggage as fallout from tech outage continues

Buttigieg said the department had received more than 3,000 complaints about Delta since the outage started.

Nationwide, Delta had canceled about 50 flights as of midday Wednesday, down from more than 500 cancellations, or 14% of its schedule, on Tuesday.

Bastian said Delta anticipates Thursday will be “a normal day, with the airline fully recovered and operating at a traditional level of reliability.”

The CEO said Delta is committed to taking care of customers whose flights are affected, "with meals, hotel accommodations and ground transportation offered through vouchers and reimbursements.” Those passengers also will receive airline miles and travel vouchers “as a further gesture of apology,” he said.

Bastian was in Paris for the Olympics, which open Friday. Delta is the airline sponsor of the U.S. Olympic team, and the airline said he was meeting with business partners while in Paris.

“Ed delayed this long-planned business trip until he was confident the airline was firmly on the path to recovery," a Delta spokesperson said in a statement. "As of Wednesday morning, Delta’s operations were returning to normal. Ed remains fully engaged with senior operations leaders.”

Bastian flew to Paris on a regularly scheduled Delta flight, the Atlanta-based airline said.

RELATED: US opens investigation into Delta after global tech meltdown leads to massive cancellations

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