The Christmas travel plans of thousands of Britons are in disarray after snow left Heathrow Airport all but shut.
Thousands were stuck there overnight and few flights will depart on Sunday. Hundreds more slept at Gatwick, as knock-on delays hit most UK airports.The Met Office warns of more heavy snow in Yorkshire, north-east England and eastern Scotland, advising essential travel only in the Edinburgh area.
Icy roads affect much of the rest of the UK. There is some rail disruption.
An extreme weather warning is in place for Edinburgh, Lothian and Borders, with some 15 to 20cm (6-8in) of snow expected between 1100 and 1800 GMT.
Up to 10cm (4in) are expected in other snow-affected areas, with up to 20cm on high ground.
Edinburgh airport was closed until 1430 GMT and then opened for departures only on Sunday.
Temperatures struggled to get above -5C (23F) overnight and BBC forecaster Matt Taylor said there were lows of -19C (-2F) in parts of Worcestershire and Shropshire. They are likely to stay below freezing throughout the day.
The Met Office also issued warnings of heavy snow in parts of Sussex, East Sussex and Kent on Sunday.
No trains are running between Oxford and Hereford, while some Chiltern Railways, South West Trains and First Capital Connect services have been weather-affected and there were delays of up to an hour on Eurostar.
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Around the UK
- Scotland: Flight freeze hits travel
- Wales: New severe ice warning
- N Ireland: Weather stalls travel
- London: More snow disruption
- Luton: Airport reopens after snow
- Oxfordshire: Cars stranded in snow
- Kent: Delays after tanker overturns
- West Midlands flight delays
- Lincolnshire: Grit '60% gone'
- Jersey: Snow disrupts air travel
- Guernsey: Snowfall closes airport
Drivers are facing queues of up to eight hours on the A34 in Oxfordshire, where more than 80 cars were abandoned on Saturday night and several jack-knifed lorries were blocking the route. The nearby Cherwell Valley services on the M40 has run out of fuel.
The M25 was closed in both directions between junctions five and six, causing long delays, after a liquid petroleum gas tanker overturned at 0900 GMT. It was not expected to reopen until at least 1800 GMT.But airports were worst hit, on a weekend when travel association Abta said hundreds of thousands of Britons were due to fly.
The BBC has received hundreds of e-mails from stranded passengers, with many saying they have no idea where they will be spending Christmas.
BA said "several thousand" of its stranded passengers were being put up in hotels but when asked if the company was confident of getting everyone to their festive destinations, a spokeswoman said: "We are in the hands of the weather."
People are advised against travelling to Heathrow Airport, which said "a few thousand" spent the night in the terminals. Just four short-haul and three long-haul flights were leaving on Sunday morning. It hoped to be operational on Monday.
'Miserable' Sue Kerslake spent the night on a terminal floor with her three young grandchildren after their Cathay Pacific flight to Hong Kong was cancelled.
"There were thousands of people in departures overnight and it got quite intense at times. The bars were open and some people were drinking and got quite nasty," she said.
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"BAA only at 0500 this morning announced there would be no arrivals in. By close of play today we are going to see something like half a million people flying to or from the UK who are not where they want to be.
"The lucky ones are the people whose holidays have been cancelled. They can just stay at home and watch Sports Personality of the Year or the final of The Apprentice.
"It's the people who have been stuck, thousands of them, in foreign destinations. If they are with non-European airlines they have to fend for themselves, and of course there are many other people who are stranded in transit at Heathrow who arrived maybe yesterday morning, had no interest in staying here at all and are simply stuck."
Analysis
"The closest comparison to Heathrow is Amsterdam (Schiphol) and that's pretty miserable too. It's not just us but it has been managed very very badly."BAA only at 0500 this morning announced there would be no arrivals in. By close of play today we are going to see something like half a million people flying to or from the UK who are not where they want to be.
"The lucky ones are the people whose holidays have been cancelled. They can just stay at home and watch Sports Personality of the Year or the final of The Apprentice.
"It's the people who have been stuck, thousands of them, in foreign destinations. If they are with non-European airlines they have to fend for themselves, and of course there are many other people who are stranded in transit at Heathrow who arrived maybe yesterday morning, had no interest in staying here at all and are simply stuck."
Stuart Gash, from Swindon, who had been due to fly to New York for a Caribbean cruise with his wife and two children, said UK airports seemed unable to cope at the first sign of snow.
He said: "There was no more than two inches of snow and yet the runway is totally covered. Why aren't they ploughing it, why aren't they gritting it, why aren't they salting it?"Andrew Teacher, from Heathrow operator BAA, said it had invested more than £6m in the last year in technology to move snow and de-ice runways and that staff had worked through the night.
But he said: "There comes a point where you cannot do any more; when you're moving snow and it's freezing behind," adding that many planes had been frozen into parking spaces.
He apologised for the "miserable" situation but said problems had been caused by "an extreme amount of snow in a very short space of time" and safety had to be prioritised.
Hundreds of staff had been drafted in to hand blankets, food and water to passengers stuck in terminals, he added, but many still complained to the BBC they had been left without.
The Independent's travel editor Simon Calder said very few of the 400,000 passengers due to fly out of Heathrow this weekend would get to their destinations. At Gatwick, 90,000 people should fly out on Sunday but 50 fights are cancelled.
A Gatwick spokeswoman said it was doing everything it could to "get passengers on their way" but advised them to check with airlines before setting out.
Infrastructure 'seized up' Aberdeen airport managed to open for just under three hours in the middle of the day, but had closed by 1500 GMT for further snow clearing, BAA said. It was expected to take at least an hour.
The runways at Jersey and Guernsey airports remain closed.
Stansted, Luton, Exeter, London City, Birmingham, Bristol and Southampton airports said flights would be subject to delays and cancellations throughout Sunday.
Belfast International Airport has reopened after some of the heaviest snowfall for 25 years, although knock-on effects have caused delays.
Ryanair has cancelled 84 flights to or from UK airports, mainly in the London area.
Continue reading the main story WEATHER AND TRAVEL INFO
- Get the latest on travel problems and school closures via your local website
- Check if snow is forecast in your area at BBC Weather
- Details of motorway and local road closures and public transport disruption are available at BBC Travel News
- For advice on handling difficult driving conditions, see the Highways Agency website
- For information about severe weather warnings, see the Met Office website
- For information about staying healthy in the cold weather, see the NHS Winter Health website
Monarch Airlines managing director Tim Jeans said reassessment of the UK's transport capabilities was needed.
"We have not coped well. The infrastructure - not just at the airports but the road infrastructure - completely seized up. The M25 going towards Heathrow and Gatwick virtually impassable within an hour of the snow starting to fall."Transport Secretary Philip Hammond has asked the government's chief scientific adviser for advice on whether the government should be planning for more severe weather in future.
"The question I'm asking him is whether we should go on assuming that an extreme weather event is something that will happen perhaps once every few years and just recognising that we just can't invest large amounts of money preparing for it, or whether it is something now that we have to assume will happen perhaps two or three times a year."
But shadow transport minister Maria Eagle accused him of complacency.
"We had a winter resilience report which was ordered by the previous government on his desk in July and he could have started by implementing the recommendations," she said.
- Despite problems in some areas, National Rail Enquiries says most routes are operating normally and advises passengers to call 08453 017 641 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 08453 017 641 end_of_the_skype_highlighting for details
- The AA said it expected to have attended around 14,000 call-outs by the end of Sunday, double the number on a normal Sunday
- Sunday's sporting schedule was again badly affected, after wide postponements of football, rugby union and horse racing fixtures on Saturday
- An urgent appeal is being made for blood donors, particularly those who are O negative, as stocks are running low
- Companies have warned of a backlog of deliveries which may not reach customers before Christmas
Wintry problems were also occurring on continental Europe.
Frankfurt airport, Germany's biggest, was open but hundreds of flights were again cancelled on Sunday because of problems elsewhere, leaving the airport halls "packed with flight guests," a spokeswoman told Reuters.
Heavy snow in northern France has led to air and train disruptions, with a quarter of flights cancelled at Paris's Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports.
The Tuscany region of northern Italy remains under heavy snow, and Florence airport was closed.
Amsterdam's Schiphol airport was open, but about 30 flights were cancelled on Sunday because other airports were closed.
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