(Reuters) -Microsoft said on Thursday it was investigating issues with its cloud services in the Central U.S. region, which had caused the grounding and cancellation of several flights.
Low-cost carriers Frontier Airlines, a unit of Frontier Group Holdings, Allegiant and SunCountry reported outages that affected operations.
While Frontier said a “major Microsoft technical outage” had hit its operations temporarily, SunCountry said a third-party vendor affected its booking and check-in facilities, without naming the company.
“The Allegiant website is currently unavailable due to the Microsoft Azure issue,” Nevada-based Allegiant said in a statement to CNN. Allegiant did not immediately respond to Reuters request for a comment.
Frontier cancelled 147 flights on Thursday and delayed 212 others, according to data tracker FlightAware. 45% of Allegiant aircrafts were delayed, while Sun Country delayed 23% flights, the data showed. The companies did not give details on the number of flights impacted.
Microsoft said its outage started at about 6 pm ET on Thursday, with a subset of its customers experiencing issues with multiple Azure services in the Central US region.
Azure is a cloud computing platform that provides services for building, deploying, and managing applications and services.
Separately, Microsoft said it was investigating an issue impacting various Microsoft 365 apps and services.
Microsoft did not immediately respond to a Reuters request seeking further details on the outage.
(Reporting by Maria Ponnezhath and Shivani Tanna; Additional reporting by Chandni Shah in Bengaluru; Editing by Varun H K and Nivedita Bhattacharjee)
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