Kerosene crisis could slam the door on us: will Budapest Airport function this season?

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Demand for kerosene surges at every airport during peak season, but it is especially critical at Budapest, where limited storage capacity makes seamless supply from available sources a necessity. Optimism persists for now, yet the protracted Iranian war offers scant reassurance. Despite President Trump’s weeks-long talk of an imminent deal, the Iranians remain defiant – a stance that could derail the summer season, inflict heavy losses on airlines, and send ticket prices skyrocketing.

Airlines cancelling flights en masse due to kerosene shortages

Kerosene shortages have gripped parts of the world, forcing major carriers to slash services: in Asia, Vietnam Airlines, Vietjet Air, Bamboo Airways, and AirAsia; in North America, United Airlines and Air Canada; and in Oceania, Air New Zealand. AirAsia has already cut capacity by 10 per cent. According to a Business Insider compilation, European airlines are now following suit – KLM, Lufthansa, Edelweiss Air, Scandinavian Airlines, and Aer Lingus among them – as reported by Hungary’s G7 outlet, affiliated with Telex.

The culprit is unmistakably the Hormuz Strait closure, through which – despite assurances – cargo ships pass only sporadically. Iranian attacks struck several vessels today, while Iranian ports remain under American blockade. Meanwhile, talks in Islamabad between US and Iranian officials make little progress, notwithstanding the Trump administration’s bold claims.

Ryanair and Wizz Air next in the firing line?

The good news for Hungary is that no disruptions have yet materialised. Budapest Airport, along with the principal domestic players Ryanair and Wizz Air, confirm operations are proceeding to plan, with summer expansions intact. Yet aviation analytics firm Cirium has downgraded its global capacity forecast: from 4-6 per cent growth to a possible 3 per cent contraction.

László Madas, a judicial aviation operations expert, warns that “next-day” cancellations by Wizz Air and Ryanair are a realistic prospect, depending on how long the Middle East crisis drags on.

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Wizz Air plane at Budapest Airport. Photo: Daily News Hungary

Does Budapest airport have enough kerosene?

Telex reports no immediate issues at Budapest, thanks to robust infrastructure, diverse sourcing options, and domestic production covering about 70 per cent of needs. MOL, Hungary’s refiner, exports none of this fuel. The remainder comes via imports, as it does for many EU states.

The Achilles’ heel is storage: tanks hold just 4-5 days’ worth. Hungary also maintains a strategic reserve of 13,000 tonnes – enough for one week.

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Will there be enough kerosene in Budapest? Photo: Daily News Hungary

Trouble looms only if imports halt, rapidly depleting reserves. Storage expansion is merely at the planning stage; Telex offers no details on boosting production.

Flights could still operate with scant fuel, albeit at reduced frequency. Airlines can reroute to avoid tanking up at shortage-hit airports.

Even so, expect sharp ticket price hikes – from fuel costs alone, never mind the shortages. Telex notes fares have already doubled in several markets.

If you missed our previous, travel-related articles:

Wizz Air reshapes Hungarian travel trends, opens new base in Italian city

Qatar Airways resumes flights to Budapest from the Middle East

One comment

  1. Don’t forget who brought this kerosene crisis to you – Donald Trump the biggest friend of Orban. They are the two biggest losers of 2026.

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