Several flights were cancelled at Heathrow Airport for the second consecutive day today after the London's airspace was temporarily closed due to a computer failure at country's national air traffic control centre.
Almost 40 flights have been cancelled at Heathrow today.
While none of the airlines flying to India from the airport reported any major disruptions, it has now emerged that the problem may be repeated because software used to control flights by Britain's controllers dates back to 1960s.
More From This Section
This resulted in widespread disruption at airports around the UK yesterday. It is the latest in a string of computer problems that have plagued Nats in recent years at its south England headquarters.
A consultant who has worked for Nats told "The Daily Telegraph" it knew its software needed to be replaced a decade ago but will be relying on the 1960s programmes for another two years.
Martyn Thomas, visiting professor of software engineering at the University of Oxford, told the newspaper: "The National Airspace System that performs flight data processing was originally written for American airspace in the late 1960s."
"It wasn't designed to cope with the volume of air traffic we have today, or to interface with modern computer software".
Professor Thomas said the system was written using a now defunct computer language called Jovial, meaning Nats has to train programmers in Jovial just to maintain the antiquated software.
UK Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin demanded answers from Nats after airspace over London and the south-east of England was closed for nearly 36 minutes, leading to a backlog that could take until this afternoon to clear.
McLoughlin said: "Any disruption to our aviation system is a matter of the utmost concern, especially at this time of year in the run up to the holiday season. Disruption on this scale is simply unacceptable and I have asked Nats for a full explanation of this evening's incident. I also want to know what steps will be taken to prevent this happening again".
Heathrow Airport has warned of knock-on effects today and asked passengers to check their flight status.