Tag Archives: 737-8AS

Ryanair to add four new routes from Manchester in March

Ryanair (Dublin) in March will add four new routes from Manchester to Barcelona, Bologna, Fuerteventura and Gran Canaria. This will bring the total of MAN routes to 36.

Copyright Photo: SM Fitzwilliams Collection/AirlinersGallery.com. Boeing 737-8AS EI-DCH (msn 33559) touches down in Dublin.

Ryanair:ย AG Slide Show

Ryanair to open two new bases in Greece

Ryanair (Dublin) today (January 14) announced that as part of a $280 million investment in Greece it would open its secondย and thirdย Greek bases (64 in total) at Athens and Thessaloniki in April 2014 with a total of three based aircraft and nine new routes.
Ryanairโ€™s new Athens base from April 2014 will deliver:
ยท2 based aircraft
ยท6 new routes to Chania, London, Milan, Paphos, Rhodes & Thessaloniki
ยท154 weekly flights
ยทOver 1.2m new passengers p.a. at Athens
ยทOver 1,200* jobs sustained at Athens
Ryanair will grow at Thessaloniki as follows:
ยท1 based aircraft
ยท3 new routes: Athens, Pisa & Warsaw (16 in total)
ยท212 weekly flights
ยทOver 1.6m pax p.a
ยทOver 1,600* โ€œon siteโ€ jobs
Copyright Photo: Paul Bannwarth/AirlinersGallery.com.ย Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DYX (msn 37517) with Comunitat Valenciana promotional markings climbs away from Nantes.
Ryanair:ย AG Slide Show

Ryanair to appeal the UKCC final report concerning Aer Lingus

Ryanair (Dublin) will appeal the UK Competition Commission (UKCC) final report concerning Ryanair’s 29.8 percent share of Aer Lingus (Dublin) and its effort to acquire a controlling share. Based on this decision the Irish ultra low-fare carrier has been shopping its share to other carriers but so far there are no takers. Here is the statement by the flamboyant airline:

Ryanair has confirmed that it will appeal the UK Competition Commission (UKCC) final report which wrongly found that Ryanair, through its 7 year old minority (29.8%) shareholding in Aer Lingus, โ€œhad led or may be expected to lead to a substantial lessening of competition between the airlines on routes between Great Britain and Irelandโ€. This baseless claim is manifestly disproven by 7 years of evidence and by the European Commissionโ€™s recent (Feb 2013) ruling that competition between Ryanair and Aer Lingus has โ€œintensifiedโ€ since 2007.

Under EU law, the UKCC has a duty of sincere cooperation with the EU, and cannot contradict or reach different conclusions to the European Commissionโ€™s findings. Inexplicably, todayโ€™s report by the UKCC infringes this legal duty by ignoring and contradicting the recent findings of the European Commission that:

โ€œAer Lingus and Ryanair compete on a greater number of routes compared to the 2007 Decisionโ€, โ€œthere is significant competitive interaction between the Partiesโ€,ย andโ€œevidence collected by the Commission in the market investigation has also confirmed that the competitive relationship between Ryanair and Aer Lingus has at least persisted, if not increased, since 2007โ€.

In addition, the UKCC has inexplicably dismissed Ryanairโ€™s unprecedented remedies package which comprehensively addressed the UKCCโ€™s three invented โ€œconcernsโ€. For example, the UKCC rejected Ryanairโ€™s offer to unconditionally sell its minority stake to any other airline that makes a bid for Aer Lingus and obtains acceptances from 50.1% of Aer Lingusโ€™ shareholders. Ryanair also offered to support Aer Lingusโ€™ rights issues and any disposal of Aer Lingusโ€™ Heathrow slots, but these simple and effective remedies were also rejected by the UKCC.

The UKCCโ€™s manifestly unjust ruling demonstrates that it did not conduct any fair investigation and that it has now merely announced what was its pre-determined conclusion. Ryanair will appeal the UKCCโ€™s unlawful ruling to the UK Competition Appeal Tribunal. In any event, until the completion of Ryanairโ€™s appeal to the EU courts against the European Commissionโ€™s February 2013 prohibition decision, the CC cannot lawfully impose any remedies on Ryanair.

Ryanairโ€™s Michael Oโ€™Leary said:

โ€œThis report by the UKCC is bizarre and manifestly wrong but also entirely expected. From the first meeting with the UKCC it has been clear to us that Simon Politoโ€™s and Roger Davisโ€™ minds had been made up in advance and no truth or evidence was going to get in the way of their story. This prejudicial approach to an Irish airline is very disturbing, coming from an English government body that regards itself a model competition authority.

Politoโ€™s and Davisโ€™ ignoring of evidence, their conduct of a manifestly unfair investigation, their omission of all the substantial body of evidence that conclusively disproves their case, and their rejection of Ryanairโ€™s unprecedented undertakings (which patently address their three invented future concerns), all in a misguided pursuit of their pre-determined conclusion, demonstrate that this process was not a competition investigation but merely a corrupt and politically biased charade.

While Ryanair is one of the UKโ€™s largest airlines, Aer Lingus has a tiny presence in the UK, serving just 6 routes to the Republic of Ireland, a traffic base that has declined over the past 3 years and now accounts for less than 1% of all UK air traffic. This case, involving two Irish airlines where one (Aer Lingus) accounts for less than 1% of the UKโ€™s total air traffic and concerns very few UK consumers, is yet another enormous waste of UK taxpayer resources from a body which took no action whatsoever when the two main UK airlines (BA and bmi) merged. It would appear to be a case of one rule for the UK airlines but an invented set of rules for two Irish airlines.

In February 2013 the European Commission found that competition between Ryanair and Aer Lingus has โ€œintensifiedโ€ since 2007. The UKCCโ€™s failure to accept this finding is a breach of its legal duty of sincere cooperation between the UK and the EU competition authorities and will form the basis for Ryanairโ€™s appeal against this bizarre and manifestly unsound ruling, which our lawyers will lodge with the Competition Appeal Tribunal in the coming weeks.โ€

Copyright Photo: Antony J. Best/AirlinersGallery.com. Boeing 737-8AS EI-DLO (msn 34178) with “Bye Bye EasyJet” sub-titles approaches the London (Stansted) for landing.

Ryanair:ย AG Slide Show

Ryanair to close its Marseille base in January due to French taxes

Ryanair (Dublin) will close its Marseille base in January due to French taxes and social insurance requirements. Ryanair considers its employees to be Irish employees while French authorities consider the employees to be under French law. 13 routes will be dropped.

Read the full report from Reuters:

CLICK HERE

Copyright Photo: Antony J. Best. Boeing 737-8AS EI-DHJ (msn 33819) lands at Bournemouth.

Ryanair is forced to cancel over 300 flights in Spain yesterday

Ryanair (Dublin) cancelled over 300 flights to and from and also in Spain yesterday.

Read the announcement from Ryanair:

CLICK HERE

Copyright Photo: Antony J. Best. Boeing 737-8AS EI-CSA (msn 29916) is pictured arriving at the Stansted Airport hub.

Blue Air is operating YR-BIB for Travel Service Airlines

Copyright Photo: Rainer Bexten.

Blue Air (Bucharest) is operating it Boeing 737-8AS YR-BIB (msn 29926) for Travel Service Airlines (Prgue), creating this interesting hybrid livery.

Copyright Photo: Rainer Bexten. YR-BIB prepares to depart from Madrid.

Michael O’Leary: Ryanair could buy up to 300 aircraft

Ryanair (Dublin) which pulled out of negotiations with Boeing for 200 aircraft, is back in the news with its CEO (Michael O’Leary) saying the company may be in the market this time for up to 300 aircraft (assuming the price is right).

Read the full report from Reuters:

CLICK HERE

Copyright Photo: Lucio Alfieri. Boeing 737-8AS EI-DCL (msn 33806) visits Bologna in the Boeing colors.

Ryanair’s quarterly profits slips to $121 million

Ryanair (Dublin) saw its fiscal first quarter net profit slip to $121 million due mainly to airspace closures due to volcanic ash.

Read the full report in Bloomberg Businessweek:

CLICK HERE

Copyright Photo: Boeing 737-8AS EI-CSA (msn 29916) approaches the Stansted Airport hub and use to promote Scotland. It has since gone on to VARIG (2nd) as PR-VBA.

Ryanair to cut Dublin winter capacity by 15%

Ryanair (Dublin) will cut its winter capacity at Dubin by 15% and reduced the number of based aircraft from 14 to 12.

Read the full WSJ report:

CLICK HERE

Copyright Photo: Antony J. Best. Now gone to VARIG, Boeing 737-8AS EI-CSC (msn 29918) in the unique Cable & Wireless logojet scheme, prepares to land at London (Stansted).

Ryanair to cut UK winter operations by 16%

Ryanair (Dublin) plans to cut United Kingdon winter capacity because of the British government’s departure tax and high airport charges, resulting in a loss of 200 Ryanair jobs at Stansted airport according to this report in the WSJ.

Read the full report:

CLICK HERE

Copyright Photo: Antony J. Best. Boeing 737-8AS EI-DHJ (msn 33819) prepares to land at Bournemouth.