FedEx says U.S. Express service disrupted, blames FAA IT outage overnight


FILE PHOTO: A worker clears debris so delivery vehicles can exit a FedEx Ground distribution center in this aerial photograph taken over Carson, California, U.S., September 16, 2022. REUTERS/Bing Guan/File Photo

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -FedEx Corp on Wednesday said its U.S. Express deliveries could be delayed due to an overnight Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) information technology system outage that the regulatory agency said has been resolved.

FedEx's signature Express service uses planes to provide overnight deliveries. The company said shipments delayed due to the outage are not eligible for a refund or credit.

"Potential delays are possible for package deliveries across the U.S. with a delivery commitment of October 25, 2023," FedEx said in a service alert.

In an email to Reuters, FedEx said the IT outage at its Memphis, Tennessee, air hub was an "FAA issue."

FAA told Reuters that departures were stopped briefly on Tuesday night due to an equipment issue that occurred during a scheduled software update. It added that operations in Memphis-area air traffic facilities have returned to normal.

FedEx competitor United Parcel Service (UPS), whose air hub is located in Louisville, Kentucky, told Reuters that its flights "have been operating as expected with nothing to report regarding delays."

(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles and David Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Alexander Smith and Jonathan Oatis)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Tech News

France must curb child, teen use of smartphones, social media, says panel
Corning forecasts second-quarter core sales above estimates on steady carrier spending
Google to pay up to $6 million to News Corp for new AI content, The Information reports
Logitech targets faster growth via education, health and AI
Logitech CEO aiming to double target market for peripherals
PayPal lifts 2024 profit forecast, execs focus on branded checkout growth
Huawei Technologies' first-quarter net profit surges 564% y/y
Meta defends its risk mitigating process amid EU probe
Amazon.com may be feeling pressure to join the dividend club
Stowaway cat gets from Utah to California in Amazon returns package

Others Also Read