Lufthansa flight LH452, bound for Los Angeles was forced to make an unscheduled landing at Phoenix due to severe thunderstorm activity.
Flight LH452, which operates as one of Lufthansa’s regular long-haul services from Munich (MUC) to Los Angeles (LAX), encountered challenging weather conditions as it approached Southern California airspace. The Airbus A380 (registration D-AIMA) was diverted approximately 350 miles east to Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport for safety reasons.
The diversion came as severe thunderstorms swept through the Los Angeles basin, creating hazardous flying conditions that made landing at LAX unsafe. The Federal Aviation Administration issued a ground stop.
Weather Conditions Force Safety Decision
Los Angeles International Airport, one of the world’s busiest aviation hubs, regularly experiences weather-related delays and diversions, particularly during the summer months when afternoon thunderstorms can develop rapidly.
Doppler radar indicated thunderstorms producing heavy rain across the warned area, with between 1 and 1.5 inches of rain having fallen and additional rainfall amounts up to 1 inch possible, according to the National Weather Service Phoenix office, which issued flash flood warnings for the region.
Phoenix as a Diversion Hub

Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport serves as a common diversion destination for flights bound for Southern California when weather conditions deteriorate. This only the second time an Airbus A380 aircraft at PHX.
Resuming Normal Operations

Following the weather clearance in the Los Angeles area, LH452 departed Phoenix at 5:00 PM for a one hour flight to LAX.

It landed in Los Angeles at 6:19 PDT, 3 hours behind schedule.
After that, a massive wall of dust swept over Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport Monday afternoon, forcing a temporary halt to operations and disrupting flight schedules.
