• About Ed Boris
  • Contact details
  • Linkedin Profile

Ed Boris

~ Expert in digital transformation

Ed Boris

Tag Archives: NATS

Airports chaos: Why the service impact lasted 16,000 minutes rather than 45 minutes as initially reported.

05 Monday Jan 2015

Posted by Edouard Boris in Business Continuity, Cloud, Cyber, Digital Transformation, RightSourcing

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Airport Chaos, Business Transformation, Capacity Management, capacity planning, NATS, post mortem, service delivery, service design, Service Management, service strategy

I’m following up on my last post (read for full details) about the Airport chaos which occurred on the 12th of December 2014 at Swanwick air traffic control centre.

What happened?

NATS, the UK-based global air traffic management company declared that system was back up and running 45 minutes after the event the failure.

An independent inquiry.

On the 15.12.14, NATS declared that the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) will carry out “an independent inquiry following the disruption caused by the failure in air traffic management systems”.

On the NATS’ web site, there is only a mention of the high level plan of the independent inquiry (I’ll explain it in a new post tomorrow). However, drilling down into the CAA’s web site, I was able to find the inquiry terms of reference.

Timelines of events and service impacts.

As provided by the CAA, this is where it gets interesting:

1. Service outage started at approximately 1515 GMT.  Following “the fault in a primary and back-up system led to a failure in the flight data server in the Area Control (AC) Operations Room”.

2. Service restoration starts : “Restrictions were gradually lifted from approximately 1605 GMT with a rapid recovery to full capacity by the middle of the Friday evening”.

This is not a precise timing, however the CAA provides more insights on the true service impact.

The CAA confirms that “Delays and cancellations were incurred totalling some 16,000 MINUTES”. The 45 minutes initially reported represented only system downtime, not service impact measured from a business perspective.

imageimage

“Airlines cancelled around 80 flights: estimated to be 2,000 minutes as a consequence of the restrictions put in place to manage traffic”.

Furthermore, 14,000 minutes  as “result of the phased recovery to prevent overloads and takes account of ground congestion at the major airports”.

“Overall around 450 aircraft were delayed of the 6,000 handled on the 12 December and the average delay to the 450 flights was approximately 45 minutes”.

The CAA reminds us that a “failure affecting the same operations room at Swanwick on 7 December 2013, which resulted in total delay amounting to 126,000 minutes and which impacted 1,412 flights and the cancellation of 300”.

NATS made a mistake by not communicating the progress made over the full service recovery and eventually on the total impact on service uptime.

Service Performance.

Remember that no one cares whether your servers are up and running when no one, or only some of your customers can access your IT services, for example SAP, email, document management, internet corporate site or ecommerce site. This is the same here, systems were up but aircraft could not take off and passengers were badly impacted.

Your service performance should always be measured as being perceived from your customer’s point of view, not from a piece of infrastructure being up perspective.

A service is very rarely operating in isolation, it operates within an echo system made of your own capabilities and what your suppliers and partners are delivering within this ecosystem. Did the hotels and restaurants  have enough vacancies to welcome the passengers?

Once services have been restored, everyone should be concerned by  customers  still suffering from the consequences, such as holidays cancelled (and potentially not reimbursed) or as after Black Friday (see my post) when the products were delivered after Christmas, long after services being actually restored and stable. Will the actual whole cost of the outage at the Swanwick air traffic control centre be ever known? I doubt.

However, NATS has already announced that “there will be a financial consequence for the company from the delay caused. Under the company’s regulatory performance regime, customers will receive a rebate on charges in the future”.

Capacity management.

The NATS managing director of Operation declared during the incident resolution: “These things are relatively rare. We are a very busy island for air traffic control, so we’re always going to be operating near capacity ”.

This is a very concerning statement. Getting service impacted by shortage in capacity is not uncommon (I’m not saying it is satisfactory) when either capacity requirements aren’t properly expressed by the business, or, when the same requirements aren’t adequately translated into efficient technical design. However, it is the responsibility of the CIO to properly and efficiently document and communicate the risks incurred by potential shortage in capacity.

Vince cable declared that the incident have been caused by lack of IT investments. Well, the question is now whether the investments were submitted and refused. The inquiry will need to determine whether the risks of running “at capacity” were properly communicated to the board.

The CAA is expecting to publish the report by the 29 March 2015.

Airports chaos: “Back-up plans worked exactly as they were designed to”

15 Monday Dec 2014

Posted by Edouard Boris in Business Continuity, Digital Transformation, Financing Decision, Innovation, Risk management

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

NATS, Service Management

On the 12th of December at 3:24pm, NATS, the UK-based global air traffic management company, confirmed that  a system outage occurred at Swanwick air traffic control centre. “The outage made impossible for the controllers to access data regarding individual flight plans and UK airspace has not been closed, but airspace capacity has been restricted in order to manage the situation”.

On the 14th of December, NATS declared  in a statement that the “back-up plans and procedures worked on Friday exactly as they were designed to and the NATS system was back up and running 45 minutes after the event the failure“.

Ok, so why the Transport Secretary, Patrick McLoughlin, has described the shutdown of much of southern England’s airspace as “simply unacceptable“?

According to the NATS  annual report and accounts 2014, NATS “operates under licence from the Secretary of State for Transport“.

On page 35 of the same report, chapter “Principal risks and uncertainties”, the very first item mentioned under “Loss of service from an air traffic control centre”, is “result in a loss of revenues” and also that  “NATS has invested in developing contingency arrangements which enables the recovery of its service capacity“.

Later on, under the “Operational systems’ resilience” section, we can read that in order “to mitigate the risk of service disruption, NATS regularly reviews the resilience of its operational systems“.

It is very surprising that the loss of revenues is mentioned whereas nothing is included on Service Level Objectives/Agreements (SLO, SLA) and Recovery Point Objectives (RPO).

In their statement,  NATS mentions that their systems were back up and running 45 minutes after the event.

According to the FT, “Air passengers faced continued disruption into the weekend even after Nats declared its systems were back to full operational capacity. A spokesman for Heathrow said 38 flights were cancelled before 9.30am on Saturday “as a knock on from yesterday”.

From a Service impact perspective, the service coulld’t be called ALL CLEAR until at least  the 13th of December at 9:30am when 30 flights were still cancelled. Therefore the service impact was at least of 18 hours, but we will need the full investigation to find out the full extent of the problem.

What does it mean that  “back-up plans and procedures worked on Friday exactly as they were designed to”? It means that the investment decisions, risk assessments, business recovery plans were designed, validated, tested and approved for at least 45 minutes system outage with reduced capacity. 

According to Telegraph.co.uk, “Britain is now the only country that is using the 1960s software. It is due to be replaced with a new system from a Spanish company in about two years, but until then they will just have to manage.”

At least we know!

Follow Ed Boris on WordPress.com

Recent posts

  • La vie du Colonel Edmond Robert Lévêque et de Marguerite Lévêque June 10, 2023
  • What most CIOs and CMOs miss when they negotiate their SaaS SLA. January 21, 2021
  • Ethic, Business, Politics and Global Warming September 16, 2018

Tags

agile Airport Chaos Architecture Design Black Friday Business Continuity Business Transformation Capacity Management capacity planning change cloud Incident Management Integrations Linkedin NATS payment PCI Planned Obsolescence post mortem Retail saas security service delivery service design Service Management service strategy Social Social media Software Design

Categories

  • Agile
  • Black Friday 2014
  • Business Continuity
  • Business Ethic
  • Cloud
  • Cyber
  • Data Science
  • Digital Transformation
  • Financing Decision
  • Innovation
  • New Trends
  • Open Compute Project
  • Payment
  • Retail
  • RightSourcing
  • Risk management
  • SAAS
  • Security
  • SmartSourcing
  • Social
  • Talent Management
  • Uncategorized

Archives

  • June 2023
  • January 2021
  • September 2018
  • June 2017
  • March 2017
  • April 2016
  • November 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • October 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • March 2014

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Ed Boris
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Ed Boris
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar