Airlines toted up losses topping $2 billion and struggled to get hundreds of thousands of travelers back home Wednesday after a week of crippled air travel, as questions and recriminations erupted over Europe’s chaotic response to the volcanic ash cloud.

Civil aviation authorities defended their decisions to ground fleets and close the skies – and later to reopen them – against heated charges by airline chiefs that the decisions were based on flawed data or unsubstantiated fears.

The aviation crisis sparked by a volcanic eruption in Iceland left millions in flightless limbo, created debilitating losses for airlines and other industries and even threatened Europe’s economic recovery. An aviation group called the financial fallout worse than the three-day worldwide shutdown after the 2001 terrorist attacks in the United States.

It was a lesson in mankind’s dependency on air travel, the vulnerability of a vital industry, and the confusion that can ensue when each nation decides for itself how to handle a problem that crosses borders.

The air space over most of Europe opened Wednesday after the vast, invisible ash-laden cloud dispersed to levels deemed safe. Restrictions remained over parts of Britain, Ireland, France and the Scandinavian countries.

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Electronic boards in Europe’s biggest hubs – London’s Heathrow, Paris’ Charles de Gaulle and Germany’s airport at Frankfurt – showed about 80 percent of flights on schedule as airlines began filling vacant seats with those who had been stranded for days. But with 102,000 flights scrapped worldwide over the last week, it could take over a week to get everyone home.

The shutdown left close to 10 million travelers stranded, and those passengers who have been waiting for days now have to wait for seats to open up on flights, CBS News Correspondent Mark Phillips reports from Heathrow.

Passengers who had a booking on a flight that operated Wednesday were among the lucky and on their way home. Backlog passengers had to hope for an opening in the coming days. Airlines are trying to add extra flights and bring in bigger planes to carry more people.

Dana Nors of Cleveland said she felt “a little nervous” before boarding a plane with her baby.

“Because of the ash in the air,” said Nors. “I’m not completely certain if it’s safe.”

Airlines are keeping a close eye on what even the small amounts of ash might be doing to their engines.

Aviation expert Michael Boyd told CBS’ “The Early Show” it could take up to seven days for airlines to return to normal schedules, adding that those people stranded in airports could expect to reach their destinations in the next four days.

In Iceland, the volcano under the Eyjafjallajokull remained active Wednesday – throwing magma chunks the size of cars into the air, bubbling lava and producing tremors. But it was not shooting ash and smoke four to six miles into the air like it did previously.

“There is much, much less ash production and the plume is low,” said Gudrun Nina Petersen, meteorologist at the Icelandic Met Office, adding that mild winds kept the ash away from crowded air flight corridors.

But scientists at Zurich’s Federal Institute of Technology said an initial analysis of samples collected over Zurich last weekend by special weather balloons concluded that safety concerns were warranted and the volcano could be getting more dangerous.

The concentration of particles was “very high” at up to 600 micrograms per cubic meter, according to Professor Thomas Peter.

The composition of the volcanic magma also appeared to be changing into a form that could become more explosive. Peter Ulmer, a professor of petrology, said the magma has been gaining in silicate content.

If it continues, or if the nearby Katla volcano also erupts, “this could lead to the most feared of all eruptions: A Plinian eruption,” Ulmer said.

That kind of eruption is named for Pliny the younger, who witnessed the devastating of Vesuvius in 79 A.D. that destroyed Pompeii. Such an event could last for weeks or months, he said.

Civil aviation officials said their decision to reopen terminals where thousands of weary travelers had camped out was based on science, not on the undeniable pressure put on them by the airlines.

“The only priority that we consider is safety. We were trying to assess the safe operating levels for aircraft engines with ash,” said Eamonn Brennan, chief executive of Irish Aviation Authority.

“It’s important to realize that we’ve never experienced in Europe something like this before,” he told the AP. “We needed the four days of test flights, the empirical data, to put this together and to understand the levels of ash that engines can absorb.”

Despite their protests, the timing of some reopenings seemed dictated by airlines’ commercial pressures.

British Airways raised the stakes in its showdown with aviation authorities Tuesday by announcing it had more than 20 long-haul planes in the air and wanted to land them in London. Despite being told the air space was firmly shut, radar tracking sites showed several BA planes circling in holding patterns over England late Tuesday before the somewhat surprising announcement that air space was to be reopened.

“We were circling for about two hours,” said Carol Betton-Dunn, 37, a civil servant who was on the first flight to land at Heathrow, from Vancouver.

She said passengers were initially told the flight would be going to London, then that it was heading for an unspecified European airport, then that Shannon airport in western Ireland would be their destination.

“It’s been exhausting,” Betton-Dunn said.

BA chief executive Willie Walsh said by Tuesday it had become clear the lockdown was excessive.

“I don’t believe it was necessary to impose a blanket ban on all U.K. airspace last Thursday,” he said. “My personal belief is that we could have safely continued operating for a period of time.”

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KLM Royal Dutch Airlines also sent aircraft toward Amsterdam before Dutch air space officially reopened, said Edwin van Zwol, president of the Dutch Pilots Association.

Lufthansa demanded and received a waiver from German authorities that allowed them to bring 15,000 passengers back to Germany on Tuesday, flying at low altitude. Other Germany-based airlines also received waivers, for a total of 800 flights, even though German airspace was not officially opened until Wednesday.

Van Zwol, a veteran Boeing 777 captain, was critical of European authorities for failing to consult with the airlines or pilots.

“They put all the experts on the sidelines,” he said. “(Airlines) are used to this. They deal with volcanic situations all over the world on a daily basis, so they are quite capable of making decisions.”

The European decision to partially reopen airspace did not come until the fifth day of the crisis, 해외 스포츠 사이트 when transport ministers of the affected states met by teleconference. The plan carved up the sky into relative zones of safety where the flight ban remained in place or was lifted according to the concentration of ash.

Ryanair chief executive Michael O’Leary slammed that slow response.

“It might have made sense to ground flights for a day or two. That’s understandable. But there should have been a much faster response by the governments, the transport ministers and the regulators,” he told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

But Tomio Okamura of the Association of Czech Travel Agents said despite huge losses his industry was happier being safe than sorry.

“It would be much bigger a catastrophe for us in case of any passenger plane crash. That would have a fatal, long-term consequences for the industry,” Okamura said in Prague.

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In Berlin, Giovanni Bisignani, the head of the International Air Transport Association, called the economic fallout “devastating” and urged European governments to compensate airlines for lost revenues like the U.S. government did following the 9/11 terror attacks.

Amid the sniping and bickering, tens of thousands of travelers remained stuck and anxious to get home.

(At left: Matt Cowley of Melbourne, Australia, waits to talk to an agent at the British Airways counter at Los Angeles International Airport Saturday.)

Bob and Maureen Hixon from Boston had been in London since Friday but could only get seats out next weekend. So they went to in Heathrow hoping for an earlier flight, concerned about their children and their 93-year-old mother.

“I have never been worried about flying in my life before today,” said Hixon, a 55-year-old mortgage broker. “But I’m not thinking about that. I’m just thinking about getting home.”

But uncertainty still remained about the safety of the volcanic debris.

The Finnish Air Force said volcanic ash dust was found in the engine of an F-18 Hornet jet but it caused no significant damage. Officials said “contaminants on its inside surfaces” of the fighter-bomber’s engine would be further analyzed.

A test flight by the German Aerospace Center found ash over eastern Germany that was comparable in density to a plume of dust above the Saharan desert. The center reported no damage to the airplane.

A French weather service plane also took samples of the air Tuesday and found no volcanic ash problems.

Those results appeared to contradict the potentially dire conclusions by the Swiss scientists.

Still the crisis may jolt the European Union to step up plans to eliminate borders in the sky that have endured unchallenged 50 years after they began melting away on the ground.

The flaws in the system, in which each country maintains sovereignty over its own airspace, “cannot be ignored much longer,” said EU spokeswoman Helen Kearns.

The EU has 27 national air traffic control networks, 60 air traffic centers and hundreds of approach centers and towers. The airspace is a jigsaw puzzle of more than 650 sectors.

Anthony Concil, a spokesman for IATA industry group, said the system was “a continuing disaster.”

“For decades the industry has been asking for a single European sky. The economic and social costs of the uncoordinated approach to this crisis by Europe is the biggest argument ever” for that, he said.

At the port of Bilbao in northern Spain, more than 2,000 weary Britons packed a ferry Wednesday and headed for England.

The ferry, which normally takes 1,000 people on a 30-hour trip to Portsmouth in southern England, carried around 2,200 people this time and asked strangers to share sleeper cabins.

Sam Gunn, 42, from Birmingham endured two hungry days sleeping at JFK Airport in New York after his flight home to England was canceled. He settled for a flight to Madrid, then caught a long bus up to Bilbao to reach the ferry.

“Oh, I’ve been traveling all over the world,” he said, chuckling.

At Heathrow’s Terminal 3 outside of London – home to many airlines including Virgin Atlantic and Air Canada – no one was allowed inside the departures level until they had been checked by their airline to ensure they had a valid ticket. The departure boards still showed about half the flights as canceled.

Despite the uncertainty, passengers were optimistic that they would soon be moving. Juanjo Dominguez, a 25-year-old web designer from London, was at the airport for his afternoon flight to New York.

“I feel good, hopeful,” Dominguez said. “I am still keeping my fingers crossed.”

At the terminal’s arrivals level, there was just a small trickle of passengers arriving from New York and Madrid.

In Spain, the airport in Barcelona – near the border with France and thus a gateway to the rest of Europe – took in flights from New York, Orlando, Vancouver, Paris, Nice and Rome. Airports in Barcelona and Madrid also chartered nearly 300 buses to get people to other cities in Europe, and Palma on the Mediterranean island of Mallorca handled 50 extra flights.

French transport minister Dominique Bussereau predicted air traffic will be back to normal before the weekend as aviation authorities expanded the corridors where planes are allowed to fly. He estimated all of Air France’s long-distance flights to and from France would fly Wednesday, and up to 70 percent of its mid-range flights.

Ryanair announced it will be resuming a “substantial proportion” of its normal services in northern Europe, beginning at midnight EDT Thursday. Services to Ireland and Britain will begin.

Deutsche Lufthansa AG’s chief executive on Wednesday welcomed the government’s decision to reopen the skies.

The quantity of ash in German airspace is so low that there’s “absolutely no danger,” Wolfgang Mayrhuber told broadcaster ARD. “We will restart our system as quickly as possible.”

Lufthansa, Germany’s biggest airline, planned to operate some 500 flights on Wednesday, compared with 1,800 on a normal day.

Mayrhuber criticized how the flight disruptions were handled, saying decisions were made on what he called forecasts of questionable reliability.

“From the beginning, we had the suspicion that the forecasting model could not be all right,” Mayrhuber said.

However, he said his company would not seek government compensation.

“We don’t need a bailout, we don’t need an umbrella,” he said.

Lufthansa is Europe’s largest airline group by sales. It owns or holds stakes in carriers including Swiss International Airlines, Austrian Airlines and British Midland.