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Ryanair full year fiscal profit rises 10% to โ‚ฌ1.45 billion, starts Liverpool – Shannon flights

"Vitoria - The Basque Connection"

Ryanair announced its financial results for the past fiscal year:

Ryanair on May 21, 2018 reported a 10% increase in full year profit after tax to โ‚ฌ1.45 billion, as lower fares (down 3%) stimulated 9% traffic growth to over 130 million guests, and an industry leading 95% load factor.

Year End 31 Mar Results (IFRS) Mar 31, 2017 Mar 31, 2018 % Change
ย Guests (m) 120.0 130.3 +9%
ย Revenue (m) โ‚ฌ6,648 โ‚ฌ7,151 +8%
ย Profit after Tax (m) โ‚ฌ1,316 โ‚ฌ1,450 +10%
ย Net Margin 20% 20% โ€“
ย Basic EPS โ‚ฌ1.053 โ‚ฌ1.215 +15%

ย ย ย ย ย 

Ryanairโ€™s CEO Michael Oโ€™Leary said:

ย โ€œWe are pleased to report a 10% increase in profits, with an unchanged net margin of 20%, despite a 3% cut in air fares, during a year of overcapacity in Europe, leading to a weaker fare environment, rising fuel prices, and the recovery from our Sept. 2017 rostering management failure. Highlights of the last year include:

โ€“ Traffic grew 9% to over 130m, despite grounding 25 winter aircraft

โ€“ Average fare fell 3% to just โ‚ฌ39.40

โ€“ Unit costs were cut by 1% (ex-fuel they rose +3%)

โ€“ Ryanair Labs stimulated record ancillary spend (+4% per guest)

โ€“ We took delivery of 50 B737 aircraft, bringing the fleet to 430 units

โ€“ We created 1,500 new jobs, and over 600 promotions

โ€“ New 5 year pay deals were concluded with most of our pilots and cabin crew

โ€“ Over โ‚ฌ800m was returned to shareholders via buybacks

โ€“ We recovered quickly from the Sept. 2017 pilot rostering failure

 

Sales:
Average fares last year declined by 3%, which was good news for our guests but bad news for competitors. Traffic grew 9% to over 130m with Germany, Italy and Spain being our 3 largest growth markets. We expect above average EU capacity growth to continue into FY19, which will have a downward effect on fares. This may be partly ameliorated by the switch of some charter capacity back to previously security challenged markets such as Turkey and Egypt. We expect later in the year, some upward pressure on pricing as significantly higher oil prices impact margins, especially those EU airlines who continue to expand despite having no prospect of achieving profitability. Ryanair will continue to pursue our load factor active/yield passive strategy. No other EU airline can compete with Ryanairโ€™s prices.

During FY18 we took delivery of 50 new B737โ€™s, and increased our Boeing order to 135 firm MAX-200 Gamechangers, with a further 75 under option (210 in total). We opened 4 bases in Burgas, Memmingen, Naples & Poznan and launched over 260 new routes. This summer, we have announced over 200 new routes including markets in Jordan, Turkey and the Ukraine. We continue to grow strongly in Germany, Italy and the UK, and our Polish charter airline, Ryanair Sun, operated its first flights in April 2018.

Ancillaries, Labs & Customer Service:

Ryanair Labs continues to deliver improvements in Customer Service, mobile & digital platforms, and our ancillary sales conversions. Labs has established 3 development offices in Dublin, Wroclaw, and Madrid, and employs almost 600 highly skilled digital professionals.

โ€œMyRyanairโ€ membership has grown to 43m, while our website & app has over 1 billion visits p.a. Our improved mobile and digital platforms have delivered a 13% increase in ancillary revenues (+4% per guest) to over โ‚ฌ2bn. Ancillaries now deliver 28% of revenue and we are well on track to achieve our 5 year goal of 30%. More guests are switching to our great value โ€œplusโ€ fares, reserved seating, priority boarding, and car hire. Ryanair Rooms penetration is rising steadily, albeit from a low base, as our guests recognise our unique combination of lowest hotel prices and travel credits.

In the area of Customer Service, we have lowered our checked bag fees while increasing the bag allowance (to 20kg). Our amended 2 cabin bag policy (1 of which goes in the hold f.o.c. for non-priority guests) has improved boarding and punctuality, and we are expanding our offers in areas such as FastTrack, and ground transport connections. In March we launched our new environmental policy, which commits Ryanair to a series of industry leading environmental targets, including moving to โ€œplastic freeโ€ within 5 years, while allowing our guests to contribute voluntarily to our carbon offset programme, the proceeds of which will be applied to support selected environmental projects.

Over the last year our on-time performance has declined by 2% from 88% to 86%. All of this decline was accounted for by increased ATC delays due to strikes and staffing/capacity shortages mainly in France, Germany and Italy. The delivery of ATC services in Europe is lamentable and creating unacceptable delays for our customers. Punctuality in Q4 was negatively impacted by unusually adverse weather conditions, which led to multiple airport snow closures at key bases including Dublin and Stansted for a number of days in late February/early March. We are working hard to increase staffing at our larger bases, re-designing boarding procedures, and providing additional spare aircraft in S.18 to improve our punctuality to our 90% target, which is a key AGB target for the coming year.

Costs:

Ryanair enjoys a significant cost advantage over all other EU airlines, and we expect this leadership to continue. In FY18, unit costs โ€“ helped by our fuel hedging โ€“ fell 1%. Even as traffic grew 9%, ex-fuel unit costs rose 3% mainly due to one-off EU261 costs arising from our Sept. 2017 cancellations, and higher H2 staff costs as we agreed substantial pay increases and 5 year pay deals with our pilots and cabin crew. We expect the market for experienced pilots in Europe to remain tight for the next 12 months, and accordingly, this will continue to put upward pressure on staff costs for all EU airlines.

In FY19 we will invest substantially in our people, our systems, and our business as we scale up the operation to take delivery of 210 Boeing Gamechangeraircraft over the next 6 years. This will lead to a modest increase in ex-fuel unit costs next year but will underpin our growth to almost 600 aircraft and 200m guests p.a. by FY24. We expect staff costs to rise by almost โ‚ฌ200m, half of which is higher pay for our front line people and half is additional headcount for growth.

Fuel will be a major cost headwind for the next 24 months. We are currently 90% hedged for FY19 at approx. $58pbl, which is well below current spot prices of almost $80pbl. While US Shale production remains strong, world demand for oil is growing, and a number of short term political factors in Venezuela, Libya and Iran, suggests that prices will continue to be elevated for the coming year. Air fares tend to follow oil prices (as they have downwards over the last 3 years) but with a lag of up to 12 months before higher oil prices feed through to higher air fares. Accordingly, we expect unit costs over the next year to rise by 9% (ex-fuel they will increase by 6%). Thereafter, we expect the impact of the lower seat cost Boeing 737-MAX aircraft, our new lower cost 10 year engine maintenance agreement, as well as airport growth opportunities and the disposal of older aircraft, to deliver flat or slightly declining non-fuel unit costs.

Labour Cost:

While we have made a promising start in negotiations with pilot unions, including signed recognition agreements with BALPA (UK) and ANPAC (Italy), we are also making considerable progress with our cabin crew negotiations, most notably in the UK and Spain. We suffered a 1 day pilot strike in Germany (Dec. 2017), and 3 days of cabin crew strikes in Portugal (in March/April), but in all cases, the majority of our people continued to work normally so these strikes had minimal impact on our operations. Our combination of higher pay, improved rosters, and unmatched job security will, we believe, continue to make Ryanair an employer of choice in the EU airline sector. Weโ€™re welcoming hundreds of new pilots and cabin crew to Ryanair this year, including many joiners from bankrupt airlines such as Monarch and Air Berlin among others. We will continue to deal openly and fairly with our people and their unions, but we will not make concessions on pay or productivity which threatens either our low cost model or our cost leadership in Europe.

Consolidation:

The industry in Europe continues to consolidate into 5 large airline groups. In the last year, Monarch went bust, Lufthansa acquired Air Berlin, and more recently IAG made an offer to acquire loss making Norwegian. During the period, Ryanair established a Polish charter airline, Ryanair Sun, which started flying in April and looks set to trade profitably in its first 12 months of operation. In April, we acquired 24.9% of LaudaMotion, and are working to increase that stake to 75% (subject to EU merger approval) so that we can work with Niki Lauda and his team to re-launch LaudaMotion as Austriaโ€™s No.1 low fares airline, serving markets from Austria and Germany to sun destinations primarily in Spain. LaudaMotion is an attractive opportunity as it is an Airbus operator, and we are looking for opportunities to grow its Airbus fleet to 30-50 aircraft over the next 5 years. LaudaMotion has a valuable portfolio of slots at many congested airports in Germany, Vienna, and Palma de Mallorca.ย  We believe that by investing in these separate airlines, we can build a substantial and profitable group of EU airlines under the Ryanair Holdings banner over the next 3 years, when it is likely that further M&A opportunities will arise. LaudaMotion will require almost โ‚ฌ100m in start-up costs, and operating losses over the next 2 years in large measure due to expensive aircraft leases from Lufthansa. Once these leases expire, we expect LaudaMotion to be modestly profitable and self-sustaining as it grows its low fare offerings in Germany and Austria.

Brexit:

We remain concerned at the likely impact of a hard Brexit. While there is a general belief that an 18 month transition agreement from March 2019 to December 2020 will be implemented and further extended, it is in the best interest of our shareholders that we continue to plan for a hard Brexit in March 2019. In these circumstances, it is likely that our UK shareholders will be treated as non-EU and this could potentially affect Ryanairโ€™s licencing and flight rights. Accordingly, in line with our Articles, we intend to restrict the voting rights of all non-EU shareholders in the event of a hard Brexit, so that we can ensure that Ryanair is majority owned and controlled by EU shareholders at all times to comply with our licences. This would result in non-EU shareholders not being able to vote on shareholder resolutions. In the meantime, we have applied for a UK AOC which we hope to receive before the end of 2018.

Balance Sheet & Cash:

Ryanairโ€™s balance sheet remains one of the strongest in the industry. At year end, our balance sheet included 400 owned B737 aircraft, all of which were added at their net purchase price, which is a significant discount to their current market value. Ryanair continues to generate significant cash flows. In the past year, we generated over โ‚ฌ2bn cash from operations. Despite capex of โ‚ฌ1.5bn, and share buybacks of over โ‚ฌ800m, year-end net debt at March 2018 was broadly flat at โ‚ฌ283m. In Feb., the Board approved another โ‚ฌ750m share buyback, which we expect to complete at the end of Oct. 2018. Including this buyback, Ryanair will have returned over โ‚ฌ6bn to our shareholders since 2008. The success of our share buyback programme is demonstrated by our 15% EPS growth in FY18 at a time when profits rose 10%.

Outlook & Guidance

Our Outlook for FY19 is on the pessimistic side of cautious. We expect to grow traffic by 7% to 139m, at flat load factors of 95%. Unit costs this year will rise 9% due to higher staff and oil prices which will, when adjusted for volume growth, add more than โ‚ฌ400m to our fuel bill. Ex-fuel unit cost will rise by up to 6% as we annualise pilot and cabin crew pay increases, and invest in our business and our systems to facilitate a 6 year growth plan to 600 aircraft and 200m guests p.a.

We have limited H1 and zero H2 fare visibility. Forward bookings are strong but pricing remains soft. Since only half of Easter fell in April, we expect a 5% fare decline in Q1 but a 4% rise in Q2 fares. While still too early to accurately forecast close-in summer bookings or H2 fares, we are cautiously guiding broadly flat average fares for FY19. Ancillary revenues will grow as penetration of customer services continues to rise. We do not expect ancillary revenue growth to fully offset higher costs and lower fares, and so we expect FY19 profits will fall to a range of โ‚ฌ1.25bn to โ‚ฌ1.35bn. This guidance is heavily dependent on H2 fares, a โ€œnormalโ€ level of ATC disruptions for S.18, the absence of unforeseen security events, and no negative Brexit developments during this period.

We have not included our investment in LaudaMotion in the above outlook as any increase to a 75% share ownership remains subject to EU Competition approval. We expect approx. โ‚ฌ100m of start-up costs, and operating losses for LaudaMotion if and or/when our proposal to take majority ownership receives regulatory approval.โ€

In other news, Ryanair on May 21ย celebrated its new Liverpool to Shannon service, which will operate 3 times weekly as part of its Summer 2018 schedule.

Photo: Ryanair.

This is Ryanairโ€™s 4th Irish service from Liverpool, in addition to Dublin (4 daily), Cork (4 weekly) and Knock (5 weekly).

Top Copyright Photo:ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EVY (msn 40319) (Vitoria – The Basque Connection) AMS (Ton Jochems). Image: 941989.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

Ryanair to open a new Dรผsseldorf base, its 86th

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DPB (msn 33603) TLS (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 940735.

Ryanair has announced that it will open a new base at Dรผsseldorf Airport from June, its 11th base in Germany and 86th in Europe, with 1 based aircraft, as it launched two new summer routes to Alicante and Malaga. These new Ryanair routes are in addition to the daily service to Palma de Mallorca which was announced earlier this year and the 12 routes operated on behalf of LaudaMotion.

 

 

Copyright Photo:ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DPB (msn 33603) TLS (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 940735.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

Ryanairโ€™s new Eindhoven routes to commence 4 months early due to demand

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DPK (msn 33610) TFS (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 923307.

Ryanair on March 23 announced it will commence its new Eindhoven routes to Agadir and Riga in July, four months earlier than planned, due to strong demand from Dutch consumers and visitors.

Ryanair operates a fleet of 400 Boeing 737-800 series aircraft, with orders for 115 new Boeing 737 aircraft and 110 new Boeing 737 MAX 200s, and options for 100 more MAX 200s, which will enable Ryanair to grow its fleet to 585 by 2024, further lower its fares and grow traffic from 120 million customers last year to 200 million per year in 2024.

The average age of the Ryanair fleet is approximately 6.5 years, and is set to get younger with the latest aircraft order.

Copyright Photo:ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DPK (msn 33610) TFS (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 923307.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

Ryanair announces two new routes from London Stansted to Ukraine

Ryanair Up Close and in your Face

Ryanair on March 23 announced two new routes from London Stansted to Kiev and Lviv as the airline announced that it will now fly to Ukraine, its 36th country.

Route Frequency
London Stansted โ€“ Kiev 5 weekly
London Stansted โ€“ Lviv 3 weekly

These new services will commence from the end of October, as part of the new Winter 2018/2019 schedule.

In other news, Ryanair has extended its partnership with Air Europa.

Copyright Photo:ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EVK (msn 40298) DUB (SM Fitzwilliams Collection). Image: 925087.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

Ryanair to fly from Berlin Tegel and Dusseldorf, announces 11 new routes from Edinburgh

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DLC (msn 33586) PGF (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 920674.

Ryanair has announced that it will operate from two new airports Berlin (Tegel) and Dusseldorf for the first time this summer. With two new based aircraft at Palma de Mallorca Airport, four new German peak summer routes (June to August) have been announced from Berlin (Tegel), Dusseldorf, Nuremberg and Stuttgart as well as extra flights from Cologne and Dortmund to Palma.

Ryanairโ€™s German Summer 2018 schedule will now include:

โ€“ 4 new routes to Palma de Mallorca from: Dusseldorf (daily), Berlin (6 weekly)
Nuernberg (4 weekly) and Stuttgart (3 weekly)
โ€“ More flights to Palma de Mallorca from: Cologne (13 weekly) and Dortmund (5 weekly)

In other news, Ryanair has alsoย announced that it will add 11 new Winter 2018/2019 routes to Edinburgh and will close its one aircraft Glasgow International base from November 2018.ย  One aircraft and 5 routes (Derry, Lisbon, Sofia, Riga and Berlin) will switch from Glasgow to Edinburgh Airport.

Ryanairโ€™s Scottish Winter 2018 schedule and includes the following highlights:

Edinburgh: 45 routes including London Stansted and 11 new routes to Berlin, Derry, Gothenburg, Hamburg, Lisbon, Memmingen, Stockholm Skavsta, Riga, Seville, Sofia, and Tallinn

Glasgow Prestwick: 8 routes to Alicante, Faro, Fuerteventura, Lanzarote, Malaga, Malta, Rzeszow and Tenerife South

Glasgow International โ€“ 3 routes to Dublin (3 times daily), Krakow (2 weekly) and Wroclaw (2 weekly)

Copyright Photo (all others by Ryanair):ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DLC (msn 33586) PGF (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 920674.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

 

Ryanair announces new routes to Jordan

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DLB (msn 33584) (Comunitat Valenciana) NTE (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 922260.

Ryanair on February 4, 2018 announced its first flights to Jordan with 14 routes in total to Amman and Aqaba airports.

Starting with a route to Paphos (Cyprus) in March, Ryanairโ€™s Amman operation will grow to 10 routes from October, as part of its Winter 2018 schedule. Flights to Aqaba will commence in October with 4 routes, and will operate for the winter season.

Ryanairโ€™s Amman year-round schedule includes:

  • 1 new route to Paphos (Cyprus) from March (4 weekly)
  • 10 new routes from October: Bologna (2 weekly), Brussels Zaventem (2), Bucharest (2), Budapest (2), Krakow (2), Milan Bergamo (3), Paphos (2), Prague (2), Vilnius (2) and Warsaw Modlin (2)

Ryanairโ€™s Aqaba Winter 2018 schedule includes:

  • 4 new routes: Athens (2 weekly), Cologne (2), Rome Ciampino (2) and Sofia (2)

Copyright Photo:ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DLB (msn 33584) (Comunitat Valenciana) NTE (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 922260.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

Ryanair and BALPA sign UK Recognition Agreement

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EKC (msn 38495) LGW (SPA). Image: 931519.

Ryanair on January 30, 2018ย confirmed that it has signed a formal Union Recognition agreement with BALPA (British Airline Pilots Association), who will now be the sole representative body for Ryanair employed Pilots in the UK.

This agreement follows extensive negotiations with BALPA since Ryanairโ€™s December announcement that it was willing to recognise Unions for collective bargaining purposes. While these recognition negotiations were continuing with BALPA, the 6 remaining Ryanair UK Bases (including Stansted) voted โ€“ in secret ballot โ€“ to accept pay increases of up to 20%, which had already been agreed by a majority (9) of other UK bases. These pay increases mean Ryanairโ€™s UK pilots are earning 20% more than competitor 737 pilots (Norwegian and Jet2).

Ryanair welcomes the positive and constructive engagement of BALPA which led to the formal signing of this recognition agreement within 5 weeks of the first meeting. This recognition agreement with BALPA is significant because the UK accounts for almost 100 of Ryanairโ€™s 400+ current aircraft fleet and over 25% of Ryanairโ€™s pilot body. Ryanair looks forward to working with BALPA and its newly elected BALPA Ryanair Company Council.

Ryanairโ€™s Chief People Officer Eddie Wilson said:

โ€œWelcoming this UK recognition agreement, we are pleased today to announce this UK recognition agreement with BALPA on behalf of our directly employed pilots in the UK. The UK accounts for 25% of Ryanairโ€™s fleet and pilot numbers. This agreement validates the decision of Ryanairโ€™s Board in December to recognise unions, and the fact that we have delivered pay rises of up to 20% and union recognition for our pilots in our largest market, shows how serious Ryanair is about working constructively with unions that are willing to work constructively with us.

This rapid progress in the UK is in marked contrast to some other EU countries where we are still waiting for a response to our recognition proposals and where some unions have failed to put these substantial pay increases to our pilots. We now call on these unions to stop wasting time and act quickly to deliver 20% pay increases to our pilots in February, and conclude formal recognition agreements, which they are presently sitting on. Ryanair will not allow these unions to delay pay increases to our pilots. In Dublin for example, where just 35% of our pilots have not yet received this pay increase, we have warned Fร“RSA/IALPA that we will offer it to these pilots individually if they refuse / fail to organise a vote among just 35% of our Dublin pilots on this pay increase on/before 31 Jan.

This agreement between Ryanair and BALPA shows that Ryanair can work with unions that wish to work with us to promote the interests of both our pilots and our customers.โ€

Copyright Photo:ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EKC (msn 38495) LGW (SPA). Image: 931519.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

Ryanair to add 3 aircraft and 10 new summer routes at Manchester

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-FOZ (msn 44731) HHN (Rainer Bexten). Image: 939090.

Ryanair (Dublin) hasย announced an additional investment of $300 million at Manchester Airport with an extra three based Boeing 737-800 aircraft for its peak summer 2018 schedule (June-September).

The airline will be added 10 new summer routes to Agadir, Almeria, Barcelona Reus, Belfast, Cagliari, Palermo, Ponta Delgada, Porto, Rhodes, and Venice Treviso and more flights on its existing routes.

Ryanairโ€™s summer 2018 Manchester schedule will now add 300,000 extra seats to a total of 57 routes which will help deliver 4.9 million customers this year.

The numbers:

  1. 12 based aircraft at Manchester
  2. 57 summer routes in total
  3. 10 new summer routes to: Agadir (2 weekly), Almeria (2 weekly), Barcelona Reus (2 weekly), Belfast (daily from March), Cagliari (2 weekly), Palermo (2 weekly) Ponta Delgada (1 weekly), Porto (3 weekly), Rhodes (2 weekly), and Venice Treviso (3 weekly)
  4. More flights to: ย Alicante, Bologna, Chania, Faro, Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, Ibiza, Lanzarote, Lisbon, Malaga, Mallorca, Naples and Tenerife

Copyright Photo:ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-FOZ (msn 44731) HHN (Rainer Bexten). Image: 939090.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

VC German Pilots Union strikes Ryanair for 4 hours affecting 16 flights

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EBB (msn 37519) (Comunitat Valenciana) RAK (Robbie Shaw). Image: 922177.

The German pilots’ union VC struck Ryanair on Friday, December 22, 2017 for four hours affecting 16 flights. The walkout was Ryanair’s first pilots strike.

Ryanair reversed its non-union stance and agreed earlier this month to recognize the unions. VC has now agreed to meet with the company in January 2018.

The VC union issued this statement on December 19, 2017 announcing the first strike:

The German based pilots of the airline Ryanair founded a Company Council on December 19, 2017 under the umbrella of the German Airline Pilots Association (Vereinigung Cockpit) (VC).

For the first time, Ryanair pilots are organizing themselves in Germany in order to avoid the airline’s questionable treatment of its employees. The goal will be to positively influence Ryanair’s employment conditions. “What is self-evident for other employees in Germany, we must first achieve at Ryanair,” says a member of the Company Council. “Decent employment contracts instead of atypical employment is one of the main goals of the Company Council.”

Based on the principle, pilots for pilots, the Company Council is composed of active Ryanair pilots representing all groups. Members include Captains and First Officers who are directly employed as well as working for Ryanair on the so-called “Contractor model”. To protect the Company Council from possible reprisals from Ryanair, the members of the Council will remain anonymous for the time being.

The current situation at Ryanair creates uncertainty within the pilot body and puts unusual pressure on the employees. The on-going court trials and investigations, including many house searches in Germany, show just how dramatic the situation is for the Ryanair pilots.

“The founding of the Ryanair Company Council clearly shows that the airline’s pilots are no longer willing to accept the doubtful methods used by their employer. In the future, they will act united to achieve their basic employee rights,” says Ilja Schulz, president of the German Airlines Pilots Association.

“In Germany we have workers’ rights which apply to all pilots based here. Ryanair must finally acknowledge this. Ryanair pilots must be able to express their wishes and concerns about working conditions and salary without fear of discrimination from the management, ” says Schulz.

The newly formed group benefits from the long-standing experience of the German Airlines Pilots Association in aviation safety and employee representation within the aviation industry.

Previously Ryanair issued this statement on December 21, 2017:

Ryanair sincerely regrets receiving notice of a threatened 4 hour pilot strike (from 5am to 9am) in Germany on Friday, December 22, 2017. This disruption called by the VC pilot union is unjustified and unnecessary when Ryanair wrote earlier this morning to the VC (copy attached) agreeing to meet them again in Frankfurt as requested on Friday, January 5, 2018 to progress the negotiations on a Collective Labour Agreement (CLA) for Germany.

At Ryanairโ€™s meeting with the VC and their Ryanair Pilots Council on Wednesday, December 20, 2017, the VC confirmed that the Ryanair Pilots Council had not been elected by Ryanairโ€™s pilots, and contained one former contract pilot who had not flown for Ryanair for 15 months, who is currently in litigation with Ryanair in Germany. Ryanair explained that it was happy to negotiate with its German pilots and the VC officials but it would not enter into negotiations with non-Ryanair pilots, or a non-Ryanair pilot who is in litigation with Ryanair.

Ryanair has written to its German pilots this afternoon asking them to work as normal tomorrow to avoid disrupting the travel plans of thousands of German passengers during Christmas week. Ryanair will continue to engage with the VC union and its German pilots to try to agree a CLA in early January, so tomorrowโ€™s 4 hour strike serves no purpose other than to disrupt thousands of German passengers in Christmas week solely, so that the VC can impose a non-elected, non-Ryanair pilot (who is currently suing the airline) on its Ryanair Pilots Council.

Ryanairโ€™s Robin Kiely said:

โ€œRyanair apologises sincerely to any German customers worried or affected by this threatened 4 hour strike tomorrow morning. We hope that our German pilots will put the needs of our customers first during Christmas week. We advise all customers in Germany to turn up as normal tomorrow, as we plan to operate all scheduled flights, and we will be doing our upmost to minimise any disruptions to the Christmas travel plans of our German customers.โ€

Copyright Photo:ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EBB (msn 37519) (Comunitat Valenciana) RAK (Robbie Shaw). Image: 922177.

Ryanair agrees to recognize pilot unions to avoid widespread customer disruptions over Christmas period

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DAD (msn 33544) BSL (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 923982.

Ryanair has made this announcement:

Ryanair on December 15, 2017 announced that it has written to the pilot unions in Ireland, the UK, Germany, Italy, Spain and Portugal inviting each of them to talks to recognize these unions as the representative body for pilots in Ryanair in each of these countries, as long as they establish Committees of Ryanair pilots to deal with Ryanair issues, as Ryanair will not engage with pilots who fly for competitor airlines in Ireland or elsewhere.

Ryanair will now change its long standing policy of not recognizing unions in order to avoid any threat of disruption to its customers and its flights from pilot unions during Christmas week. Ryanair now calls on these pilot unions to call off the threatened industrial action on Wednesday, December 20, 2017 so that our customers can look forward to travelling home for Christmas without the threat or worry of pilot strikes hanging over them.

Photos Above: Ryanair and Boeing.

Ryanairโ€™s Michael Oโ€™Leary said:

โ€œChristmas flights are very important to our customers and we wish to remove any worry or concern that they may be disrupted by pilot industrial action next week.

If the best way to achieve this is to talk to our pilots through a recognised union process, then we are prepared to do so, and we have written today to these unions inviting them to talks to recognise them and calling on them to cancel the threatened industrial action planned for Christmas week.

Recognising unions will be a significant change for Ryanair, but we have delivered radical change before, most recently when we launched Ryanair Labs and our highly successful Always Getting Better customer improvement programme in 2013.

Putting the needs of our customers first, and avoiding disruption to their Christmas flights, is the reason why we will now deal with our pilots through recognised national union structures and we hope and expect that these structures can and will be agreed with our pilots early in the New Year.โ€

Copyright Photo (all mothers by Ryanair):ย Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DAD (msn 33544) BSL (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 923982.