Published on : 15 May 2026
Breaking — May 15, 2026: Canada is experiencing its single worst aviation day of 2026. A total of 271 delays and 140 cancellations — 411 total disruptions have been recorded across eight Canadian cities today, driven by a severe Alberta wind event generating gusts of 90–100 km/h that has brought Edmonton International Airport to near-standstill and cascaded disruption east to Toronto, Montreal, and west to Vancouver. Edmonton International has recorded 66 cancellations — the highest single-airport cancellation count of any Canadian airport on any day this year. Toronto Pearson has recorded 167 delays and 19 cancellations. WestJet — Canada’s second-largest carrier — is today’s worst airline by cancellations with 58 cancelled flights. Air Canada leads by delays with 71 disruptions. Flights to Las Vegas, Cancún, Houston, and Phoenix from Alberta airports have recorded 100% cancellation rates today. Hundreds of passengers are stranded. The Alberta wind event is expected to gradually weaken by this evening — but the cascade into eastern Canada will persist through tomorrow morning. Here is every number, every carrier, every right you hold.
Published: May 15, 2026 — Thursday National Total: 271 delays + 140 cancellations = 411 total disruptions — Canada’s worst day of 2026 Primary Cause: Severe Alberta wind event — northwest winds gusting 90–100 km/h — Environment Canada yellow wind warning issued Secondary Causes: Blowing dust near Red Deer, Drumheller, and Brooks reducing visibility · Day 45 national network positioning debt · High wind interference with aircraft takeoffs, landings, and ground handling Worst Airport by Cancellations: Edmonton International (YEG) — 19 delays + 66 cancellations = 85 total Worst Airport by Delays: Toronto Pearson (YYZ) — 167 delays + 19 cancellations = 186 total ⚠️ Other airports: Vancouver (YVR): 40 delays + 18 cancellations · Calgary (YYC): 38 delays + 19 cancellations · Montreal-Trudeau (YUL): 46 delays + 2 cancellations · Ottawa (YOW): 14 delays + 2 cancellations · Winnipeg (YWG): 14 delays + 6 cancellations · Regina (YQR): 8 cancellations + 2 delays Worst Carrier by Cancellations: WestJet — 58 cancellations + 35 delays = 93 total Worst Carrier by Delays: Air Canada — 71 delays + 34 cancellations = 105 total Also Disrupted: Jazz (ACA) 41 delays · WestJet Encore 26 cancellations + 19 delays · Air Canada Rouge 15 cancellations + 14 delays · Porter Airlines · Flair Airlines · British Airways · Cathay Pacific · United Airlines · Air Transat · KLM 100% Cancellation Airports from Alberta: Las Vegas (LAS) · Cancún (CUN) · Houston Bush (IAH) · Phoenix (PHX) · CFB Comox (YQQ) Partial Alberta downstream airports: Victoria (YYJ) — 7 cancellations · Saskatoon (YXE) — multiple cancellations · Medicine Hat (YXH) — 50% cancellation rate International routes hit at Toronto: London Heathrow · Zurich · Cancún · Punta Cana · Miami · Boston · JFK · Vancouver · Edmonton British Airways at YYZ: 3 delays — 75% delay rate — London Heathrow service disrupted Virgin Atlantic at YYZ: 2 delays — 100% delay rate APPR compensation eligibility: ⚠️ Weather-driven disruptions exempt from cash compensation. Rebooking and care rights unconditional. Wind forecast: Gusts of 90 km/h gradually weakening by this evening — some recovery expected overnight APPR key right: If airline cannot rebook within 9 hours of controllable cancellation, must book on competitor carrier Source: 7 hours ago Toronto-specific; 9 hours ago Calgary-specific) · Environment Canada yellow wind warning · FlightAware
Two independent T&TW sources published today give different Toronto Pearson figures. The national Canada article (11 hours ago) reports 98 delays + 19 cancellations. The Toronto Pearson-specific article (7 hours ago — more recent) reports 167 delays + 19 cancellations. This article uses the higher, more current figure of 167 delays — consistent with a worsening disruption pattern as the day progressed. Check flightaware.com for the live count.
Canada’s aviation disruption history in 2026 has been shaped by three escalating waves — and today represents a fourth, distinct peak driven by geography rather than fuel costs or US cascade:
The 2026 Canadian disruption arc:
| Date | National Disruptions | Primary Cause |
|---|---|---|
| April 1 (Good Friday) | ~355 | US Easter cascade |
| May 2 | 390 | Spirit Airlines US shutdown cascade |
| May 5 | 419 | Crew shortages + positioning |
| May 9 | 223 | Recovery day |
| May 13 | 187 | Operational strain |
| May 14 | 187 | Internal airline ops (APPR comp may apply) |
| May 15 | 411 | Alberta wind 90–100 km/h — WORST of 2026 |
Why 411 beats every previous 2026 Canadian record: The 140 cancellations embedded in today’s 411 total is the critical number. Previous high-disruption days in Canada have typically produced a 10–15% cancellation rate — most disruption manifests as delays. Today’s 140 cancellations represent a 34% cancellation rate among total disruptions — three times the normal proportion. This reflects the severity of the Alberta wind event: when gusts reach 90–100 km/h, aircraft cannot safely operate ground handling procedures, and many aircraft cannot safely land or depart. Airlines do not delay these flights — they cancel them outright.
The cascade mechanism: Edmonton’s 66 cancellations do not stay in Edmonton. Every aircraft that should have arrived at Edmonton today and turned around for Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, or Montreal does not arrive. Those turnaround aircraft are missing from their next departure cities. Toronto Pearson’s 167 delays reflect, in significant part, the absence of aircraft that should have arrived from Edmonton, Calgary, and other Alberta airports this morning and afternoon.
Environment Canada has issued yellow wind warnings for Calgary and surrounding areas, predicting sustained gusts up to 100 km/h. Northwest winds gusting 90–100 km/h are the primary operational trigger. Blowing dust has been reported near Red Deer, Drumheller, and Brooks, reducing visibility and creating additional approach and departure constraints beyond the wind speed itself.
How 100 km/h gusts shut down an airport:
At 100 km/h (approximately 54 knots), sustained gusts exceed the crosswind limitations of many aircraft types — particularly regional turboprops and small jets that operate Edmonton’s and Calgary’s short-haul and regional routes. The most-cancelled aircraft type at Edmonton today are the Bombardier Q400 (used by Jazz/Air Canada Express) and the Boeing 737-700 series (WestJet Encore) — both of which have crosswind limits that 100 km/h gusts can exceed on runways not oriented into the wind.
Ground handling is also directly affected. Ramp agents cannot safely position jet bridges, load cargo doors, or handle fuel in 100 km/h gusts. Any aircraft that does land needs extended ground time for safe handling — which means the departure slot for the outbound flight is missed, compounding the cascade further.
Local authorities have warned that high-sided vehicles may be pushed by the wind, and damage to roofs, fences, and branches is possible. Airport operations are continuing with heightened safety protocols.
The forecast: Winds are expected to gradually weaken by this evening. A partial recovery at Edmonton and Calgary should begin tonight, with meaningful improvement by tomorrow morning. However, the cascade into eastern Canada’s air network from today’s positioning failures will take 24–36 hours to fully resolve.
Highest cancellation count of any Canadian airport on any day in 2026
Edmonton International Airport is the epicentre of today’s crisis. The 66 cancellations recorded today exceed any previous single-day cancellation record at this airport in 2026 — by a significant margin. Edmonton’s exposure is acute because:
Carrier breakdown at Edmonton today:
100% cancelled destinations from Edmonton today:
Downstream airports hit from Edmonton originating flights:
If you are stranded at Edmonton today: Do not queue at the check-in desk — the queues are hours long. Use the WestJet or Air Canada app to rebook. If the app shows no available flights today, check tomorrow morning’s early departures — that is when recovery rotations typically begin. If your flight is 3+ hours late, Edmonton’s terminal has a WestJet and Air Canada customer service desk adjacent to departures. Text and call updates from your airline’s app are more current than the departure board.
Contact WestJet YEG: westjet.com → Manage Trips | 1-888-937-8538 Contact Air Canada YEG: aircanada.com → My Bookings | 1-888-247-2262 Edmonton Airport information: 780-890-8382 | flyeia.com
Highest delay count of any Canadian airport today
Toronto Pearson is Canada’s busiest airport and the primary absorber of the national cascade from Alberta’s wind disruption. The 167 delays at Pearson today reflect two simultaneous forces:
Force 1 — Alberta cascade: Aircraft that should have arrived from Edmonton, Calgary, and other Alberta airports are not arriving. Every missing aircraft represents a missing outbound departure from Toronto. The 167 delays at Pearson include a significant proportion of “aircraft positioning” delays — the inbound aircraft is late, so the outbound is late.
Force 2 — Independent Toronto pressure: Toronto Pearson is also operating under its own independent disruption pressures — the same Day 45 network positioning debt that has affected Canada throughout May, combined with high passenger volumes as summer travel season begins.
International routes disrupted at Toronto today:
🇬🇧 UK passengers on BA or Virgin YYZ→LHR today: British Airways’ 75% delay rate at Pearson means there is a high probability your specific flight is delayed. If your BA or Virgin flight arrives at London Heathrow 3+ hours late, UK261 may apply — BA and Virgin are UK carriers departing from Toronto (a non-UK airport). Check your ticket conditions: EU261/UK261 applies to UK and EU-carrier flights regardless of departure country. Document your LHR arrival time precisely.
Carrier breakdown at Toronto Pearson:
✈️ Air Canada: Highest delays at YYZ — plus 34 cancellations nationally (3 at YYZ specifically). Routes: Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Boston, JFK, Miami, London, Zurich all disrupted ✈️ Jazz (ACA) / Air Canada Express: 41 delays nationally — many originating at YYZ feeders ✈️ WestJet: 2 cancellations + 10 delays at YYZ — transborder routes most affected ✈️ Porter Airlines: 16 delays — Porter’s dense YYZ operation and regional routes all running behind ✈️ British Airways: 3 delays at YYZ — 75% delay rate — London Heathrow service impacted ✈️ Virgin Atlantic: 2 delays — 100% of Virgin’s YYZ operations delayed ✈️ Air China: 1 cancellation ✈️ Delta Air Lines: Delays on transborder operations ✈️ PSA Airlines (as American Eagle): 5 delays — connecting to American hubs
Contact Air Canada YYZ: aircanada.com | 1-888-247-2262 | Air Canada app → My Bookings Contact WestJet YYZ: westjet.com | 1-888-937-8538 Contact Porter Airlines YYZ: flyporter.com | 1-888-619-8622 Contact British Airways YYZ: ba.com | 1-800-247-9297 (North America) Pearson live status: torontopearson.com/en/flights/flight-status
Vancouver is absorbing a dual impact today: the Edmonton wind cascade (missing inbound aircraft from Alberta) and its own independent pressure from Air Canada, WestJet, and Air Canada Rouge operating under the same Day 45 positioning stress as the rest of the national network.
Carriers at YVR today:
🇦🇺 Australian passengers note: Cathay Pacific’s Vancouver–Hong Kong service is one of the key connections for Canadians routing to Australia via Hong Kong. Today’s Cathay delays at Vancouver cascade into Hong Kong connection windows. If you are connecting YVR→HKG→SYD or YVR→HKG→MEL today, allow for extended connection time at Hong Kong.
Contact YVR: yvr.ca → Flight Information | 604-207-7077
Calgary sits between Edmonton and the rest of Canada — literally and operationally. Environment Canada’s yellow wind warning covers Calgary as well as Edmonton, with sustained gusts up to 100 km/h. Strong winds and unstable weather around Calgary have forced pilots to delay departures and cancel services outright.
Specific Calgary impacts:
International Calgary routes affected: Cancún (CUN), San Francisco (SFO), Seattle-Tacoma (SEA)
Montreal’s disruption today is relatively contained by cancellations (only 2) but significant by delays (46). The low cancellation count at Montreal reflects that Montreal’s own weather is not driving the disruption — it is absorbing cascade delays from aircraft originating in Alberta and Ontario.
Carriers at Montreal today:
Contact Air Canada YUL: aircanada.com | 1-888-247-2262
Winnipeg’s 6 cancellations reflect WestJet and Air Canada positioning failures from the Alberta cascade. Regina’s 8 cancellations with only 2 delays indicates that Regina, like Edmonton, has significant wind exposure — aircraft are cancelling outright rather than delaying. Air Canada Encore (WestJet Encore in particular) is the primary carrier at both airports today.
Worst Canadian airline by cancellations on any day of 2026
WestJet’s 58 cancellations today establish a new record for the worst single-day cancellation performance of any Canadian airline in 2026. WestJet’s network is heavily concentrated in Western Canada — Calgary (YYC) and Edmonton (YEG) are WestJet’s two primary hubs. When Alberta’s wind event generates 100 km/h gusts across both hubs simultaneously, WestJet bears a disproportionate share of the national cancellation burden.
WestJet’s most affected routes today:
WestJet Encore: Contributing 26 cancellations and 19 delays — concentrated in Alberta regional routes (Medicine Hat, Grande Prairie, Fort McMurray, Lethbridge)
WestJet APPR rights for today’s passengers: Today’s disruptions are primarily weather-caused. Under the Air Passenger Protection Regulations:
Contact WestJet: westjet.com → Manage Trips | 1-888-937-8538 | WestJet app → My Trips
Worst Canadian airline by delays today
Air Canada’s 71-delay count today is the highest of any carrier and reflects the airline’s national network exposure — Air Canada has the widest geographic footprint of any Canadian carrier, with routes to every major Canadian city and to international destinations including London, Zurich, Tokyo, Frankfurt, and Hong Kong. When Alberta’s wind event disrupts Air Canada’s western network, the cascade reaches every corner of its national and international operation.
Air Canada’s most disrupted routes today:
Air Canada Rouge: Adding 15 cancellations and 14 delays — primarily leisure routes (Caribbean, Mexican sun destinations) from Alberta and Ontario
Air Canada APPR rights: Same as WestJet framework. Key advantage: Air Canada has full interline agreements — if the airline cannot rebook you within 9 hours of a controllable disruption, it can book you on WestJet. Today’s disruptions are weather-driven, but if your delay is because Air Canada’s crew or aircraft was not available independently of the weather — that element is controllable and compensation may apply.
Contact Air Canada: aircanada.com → My Bookings | 1-888-247-2262 | Air Canada app
Jazz (Air Canada Express) operates Air Canada’s regional feeders. Its 41 national delays today are concentrated at Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary, and Edmonton — every major Jazz base is recording elevated disruption as the Alberta wind cascade propagates through Jazz’s tight turnaround schedules.
If your Jazz (Air Canada Express) flight is cancelled: Contact Air Canada directly — not Jazz. Your ticket is Air Canada (AC) coded and Air Canada holds the rebooking authority.
Porter operates primarily from Toronto Billy Bishop (YTZ) and Ottawa (YOW). Porter’s 16 delays at Toronto Pearson reflect both the national cascade and its own positioning constraints on routes between Toronto, Ottawa, Halifax, Montreal, and select US destinations.
Contact Porter: flyporter.com | 1-888-619-8622
British Airways’ 75% delay rate at Toronto Pearson today is the highest delay rate of any international carrier at any Canadian airport on any day this week. BA’s single daily YYZ→LHR departure is heavily delayed.
🇬🇧 UK passengers: If your BA YYZ→LHR arrives at Heathrow 3+ hours late, UK261 potentially applies — British Airways is a UK carrier. Document your Heathrow gate arrival time precisely. Contact BA customer relations at ba.com within 6 years of travel.
Cathay’s Vancouver–Hong Kong service is delayed today. For Australian and New Zealand passengers routing YVR→HKG→AUS, this creates cascade risk at Hong Kong’s tight connection windows.
Today’s disruption is primarily driven by the Alberta wind event — an environmental factor beyond airline control. Under Canada’s Air Passenger Protection Regulations (APPR):
Weather-caused disruptions: ❌ Cash compensation ($125–$1,000 CAD) is NOT applicable for weather-caused cancellations or delays ✅ Rebooking rights ARE applicable — airlines must rebook you on their next available flight ✅ Duty of care IS applicable — meals, refreshments, accommodation for long waits
But here is the critical nuance: Not every cancellation today is purely weather-caused. Some cancellations at Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver are caused by aircraft positioning failures — the aircraft that should have arrived from Calgary or Edmonton did not arrive because of the wind event, but the decision to cancel the outbound flight at Toronto may be a controllable operational decision by the airline.
Ask this question: “Is this delay caused by weather conditions at this airport right now, or by a late-arriving aircraft from another city?” If the answer is the latter — your situation is operationally complex and may have a compensation element.
If your flight is CANCELLED: ✅ Rebooking on the next available flight on the same carrier — at no extra charge ✅ Right to rebook on a competitor carrier if the airline cannot provide rebooking within 9 hours of the original departure time — this is APPR’s most powerful provision ✅ Full refund if you choose not to travel — within 30 days for credit card, longer for other methods
The competitor rebooking right in plain English: If WestJet cannot get you from Edmonton to Toronto within 9 hours of your scheduled departure, WestJet is legally required under APPR to book you on Air Canada, Porter, or any other carrier that can. Say this exactly: “Under the Air Passenger Protection Regulations, my flight has been cancelled and WestJet cannot rebook me within 9 hours. I am requesting that you book me on the next available Air Canada or Porter flight to my destination.”
If your flight is DELAYED:
| Delay Duration | APPR Entitlement |
|---|---|
| 2+ hours at departure | Written explanation of delay cause + status updates every 30 minutes until new departure confirmed |
| 3–6 hours (controllable) | $125 CAD compensation — NOT applicable for weather today |
| 6–9 hours (controllable) | $250 CAD compensation — NOT applicable for weather today |
| 9+ hours (controllable) | $500 CAD compensation + right to rebook on competitor carrier |
| Any duration (controllable) | Meals, refreshments, access to communication facilities |
| Overnight (any cause) | Hotel accommodation + transport to and from hotel |
Step 1: File with your airline within 1 year of travel
Step 2: If rejected within 30 days: escalate to the Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA)
Step 3: If accommodation costs were incurred: keep ALL receipts. Hotels, meals, taxis, rideshares — all reimbursable for disruptions within airline control.
1. Open your airline app and search for the next available flight BEFORE going to the check-in desk With 140 cancellations today, check-in desks at Edmonton, Calgary, and Toronto are swamped. Most airlines allow self-service rebooking in the app — WestJet, Air Canada, and Porter all offer this. A rebooking completed on your phone in 5 minutes is faster than a 2-hour desk queue.
2. Edmonton passengers: If flying to Las Vegas, Cancún, Houston, or Phoenix today — your flight is cancelled All these routes are showing 100% cancellation rates from Edmonton. Do not go to the airport. Check your airline’s app for the next available departure — most will be tomorrow morning. Call WestJet (1-888-937-8538) or Air Canada (1-888-247-2262) to rebook to tomorrow’s first available flight.
3. Invoke your APPR competitor rebooking right if your airline cannot rebook within 9 hours If WestJet or Air Canada tells you the earliest available rebooking is more than 9 hours from your original departure: invoke APPR. Say: “Under the Air Passenger Protection Regulations, I am requesting rebooking on any available carrier that can get me to [destination] within 9 hours.” Get the agent’s name. Document the conversation.
4. British Airways and Virgin Atlantic passengers at Toronto: document your LHR arrival time Your UK261/EU261 compensation claim depends on the precise time your aircraft reaches the arrival gate at London Heathrow — not wheels-down, but the gate arrival. Take a photo of the arrivals board at LHR showing your actual arrival time. This is your claim evidence.
5. Keep all receipts for meals, hotels, and transport during any delay over 2 hours Even for weather-caused disruptions, some airlines voluntarily reimburse meal and hotel costs. Request meal vouchers at the airport first — if refused, purchase and keep receipts. For delays with any controllable element, submit these through your airline’s reimbursement process within 30 days.
The Alberta wind event is expected to gradually weaken by tonight. A partial operational recovery at Edmonton and Calgary should begin from approximately 20:00–22:00 local time tonight. Full morning recovery at Alberta airports is expected by 06:00 May 16 — but “recovery” means returning to pre-wind disruption operations, not resolving the positioning failures generated today.
The 24–36 hour cascade: Aircraft that ended May 15 in the wrong city — or not at all, because they were cancelled — will begin May 16 out of position. Crews that hit duty-hour limits at Edmonton or Calgary today will be unavailable for their May 16 first sectors. The national network needs 24–36 hours of clean weather to fully work through today’s positioning debt.
Passengers with May 16 early morning departures from Alberta: Check your flight status tonight before bed. A 05:30 Edmonton departure that looks normal on your app right now may be pushed to 08:00 or 09:00 as the airline works through overnight recovery rotations. Search your flight number on FlightAware tonight to see where your inbound aircraft physically ends the day.
The Bottom Line: May 15 is Canada’s worst aviation day of 2026 — surpassing May 5’s 419 disruptions by setting a new record for cancellations (140) that is nearly three times the proportion of any previous Canadian high-disruption day. The 90–100 km/h Alberta wind event is the direct trigger, but the cascade it generates — missing aircraft at Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal — is what makes a local weather event a national aviation emergency. WestJet’s 58 cancellations and Air Canada’s 71 delays will not resolve until Alberta’s winds ease tonight and the overnight recovery rotations restore aircraft to their correct positions. If you are stranded: use the app, not the desk. If WestJet or Air Canada cannot rebook you within 9 hours, invoke your APPR competitor rebooking right — they are legally required to book you on another carrier. And if your British Airways or Virgin Atlantic Toronto–London flight is running late: document your Heathrow arrival time for a UK261 compensation claim.
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Posted By : Vinay
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