Tag Archives: EIDCL

Ryanair announces three new routes from Athens

Ryanair (Dublin) has announced three new routes from their Athens base, to Budapest, Bratislava and Santorini (Thira).

Reported by Assistant Editor Oliver Wilcock from Manchester.

Copyright Photo: Karl Cornil/AirlinersGallery.com. Painted in the updated Boeing Dreamliner color scheme, Boeing 737-8AS EI-DCL (msn 33806) arrives at Charleroi near Brussels.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:ย AG Slide Show

 

Ryanair to add more Ireland-UK frequencies in response to Aer Lingus increases, takes another swipe at the UKCC

Ryanair (Dublin) always famous for its comments about government agencies, has issued this new scathing comment and news:

Ryanair, the UKโ€™s largest airline, today (31 July) announced that it would add additional daily frequencies from October on its five main Ireland-UK routes in a direct response to similar flight increases recently announced by Aer Lingus for the 2013-14 winter schedule. Aer Lingusโ€™ decision to increase flight frequencies on these UK routes further undermines the discredited UKCC investigation into Ryanairโ€™s 6 ยฝ year old minority (29%) stake in Aer Lingus. Confronted with incontrovertible evidence that competition between Ryanair and Aer Lingus has intensified, the UKCC has been reduced to inventing fairytale future โ€œconcernsโ€ that Ryanair has โ€œinfluenceโ€ over Aer Lingus or that this stake has or will lead to a lessening of competition.

The UKCC, in its provisional findings, has ignored, or excluded, 6 ยฝ years of evidence which totally disproves their bogus claims. It has failed to produce any evidence that competition would be lessened (or UK consumers penalised) when the European Commission recently (Feb 2013) prohibited Ryanairโ€™s offer for Aer Lingus on the very grounds that competition has intensified between the two Irish airlines over the past 6ยฝ years. If, as the UKCC now claims, Ryanair has โ€œinfluenceโ€ over Aer Lingus which โ€œmightโ€ lessen competition, then it should explain why Aer Lingus has recently increased flights on the five main Ireland-UK routes or why Ryanair is now responding with yet more flight frequency, which will lead to lower prices and better deals for those few UK consumers who actually fly Aer Lingus.
Ryanair will add at least one additional daily return flight from October 2013 to each of its top 5 Dublin-UK routes including London (STN), Manchester, Birmingham, Edinburgh and Bristol as follows:
RYANAIR INCREASES ON 5 DUBLIN-UK ROUTES โ€“ WINTER 2013-14
Route
Daily rotations Nov 2012
Daily rotations Nov 2013
Dublin โ€“ London (STN)
7
8
Dublin โ€“ Manchester
4
5
Dublin โ€“ Birmingham
3
4
Dublin โ€“ Edinburgh
3
4
Dublin โ€“ Bristol
2
3

 

Ryanair continues to question why the UKโ€™s OFT and CC have wasted millions of UK taxpayer funds investigating a 6 ยฝ year old failed merger between two Irish airlines (which has little, if any, impact on any UK consumers) while at the same time neither quango took any action whatsoever on behalf of UK consumers when BA acquired BMI, or previously when Easyjet acquired GB Airways. The UKCC has failed to explain this glaring lack in consistency particularly when neither the EU nor the Irish competition authorities had any concerns about Ryanairโ€™s 6 ยฝ year old minority stake.
Since the UKCC inquiry has been unable to produce one shred of evidence that competition between Aer Lingus and Ryanair has lessened over the past 6 ยฝ years and since the UKCC has been forced to accept the EUโ€™s ruling (that intensified competition has benefited consumers) this has reduced the UKCC to flailing around, inventing fairytale future โ€œconcernsโ€ so that it can ignore the inconvenient truths of the last 6 ยฝ years of evidence.
The UKCCโ€™s 3 fairytale future โ€œconcernsโ€ are disproven by the past 6 ยฝ years of evidence as follows;
a) That Ryanair โ€œmightโ€ block a rights issue by Aer Lingus: however the UKCC have ignored the inconvenient truth that over the past 6 ยฝ years โ€“ Ryanair has repeatedly confirmed it will support take up rights to prevent dilution.
b) That Ryanair โ€œmightโ€ block a disposal by Aer Lingus of its Heathrow slots (despite the fact any such disposal would lessen competition between the two airlines) while ignoring the inconvenient fact that Aer Lingus, as recently as April 2013, disposed of a pair of Heathrow slots without any objection or block by Ryanair.
c) That Ryanair โ€œmightโ€ prevent another EU airline from acquiring Aer Lingus, and/or โ€œsqueezing outโ€ Ryanair. Again the UKCC has ignored the inconvenient truth that over the past 6 ยฝ years, no other EU airline has shown any interest in acquiring Aer Lingus and almost all other EU airlines have publicly stated that they have no interest in acquiring Aer Lingus.
In order to destroy any remaining shred of credibility from these bogus and invented โ€œconcernsโ€ Ryanair has offered toย unconditionally and irrevocably dispose of its 29% minority shareholding to any other EU airline who offers for, and successfully acquires 50.1% of Aer Lingusย (which is far below the legal 80% squeeze out threshold). This undertaking has been dismissed by many commentators on the very obvious grounds that no other EU airline wishes to acquire Aer Lingus, another inconvenient fact which the UKCC has conveniently ignored. Ryanairโ€™s undertaking removes any possibility that it can or could block an acquisition of Aer Lingus by another EU airline and sheds this UKCC process of any credibility whatsoever.
The UKCCโ€™s case now lies in tatters, as Simon Polito and his team flounder around, looking to invent new and even more fairytale โ€œconcernsโ€ when the inconvenient truth is that 6 ยฝ years of evidence proves that Ryanairโ€™s minority stake has resulted in intensified competition between the Irish airlines to the benefit of UK consumers. Finally, the UKCC has produced no shred of evidence whatsoever that any other EU airline โ€“ other than Ryanair โ€“ has any interest in acquiring Aer Lingus.
Copyright Photo: Lucio Alfieri/AirlinersGallery.com.ย Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-DCL (msn 33806) in the original Dreamliner colors taxies at Bologna.
Ryanair:ย AG Slide Show

Ryanair announces its 55th base at Chania, Greece

Ryanair (Dublin) has announced it will open its firstย Greek base and the 55thย base in total at Chania in April 2013 with one based aircraft. The ultra low-fare airline unveiled 11 new routes (26 in total), from Chania to Billund, Bremen, Bristol, Eindhoven, Katowice, Marseille, Memmingen, Thessaloniki, Venice, Vilnius and Warsaw. Ryanair is investing over $70 million at Chania.
Chania is the second largest city on the island of Creteย and is also the capital of theย Chania region. Chania is located the north coast of the island, about 90ย miles west ofย Heraklion which gets most of the traffic to Crete.
Copyright Photo: Keith Burton. Boeing 737-8AS EI-DCL (msn 33806) painted in the Dreamliner promotional colors arrives at the London (Stansted) hub.
Ryanair:ย AG Slide Show

Ryanair is still optimistic about its proposed takeover of Aer Lingus after the EC ruling

Ryanair (Dublin) is still optimistic about final European Commission approval of its proposed takeover of rival Aer Lingus (Dublin). The European Commission has raised concerns about competition in Ireland despite Ryanair’s offer to surrender European routes from Ireland to allow for other carriers to add Irish service.

Ryanair issued the following statement:

Ryanair, Europeโ€™s only ultra-low cost airline, confirmed on November 14 that its discussions continue with the European Commission about its radical package of remedies designed to address the Commissionโ€™s competition concerns in relation to Ryanairโ€™s June 19 offer for Aer Lingus.ย This comprehensive remedies package includes a number of new airline bases in Dublin, new entrant competitors on over 40 routes to/from Dublin, Cork and Shannon, as well as specific competition solutions that guarantee increased price competition on routes to and from Ireland.

Following receipt of the Commissionโ€™s statement of objections last evening (November 13), a standard procedural step in Phase II EU merger reviews, Ryanair expects that the Commission will shortly market test this transformational remedies package, and remains confident that its offer for Aer Lingus will receive competition clearance following any fair assessment by the Commission.ย A detailed process of engagement with the EU Commission is now underway.

Ryanairโ€™s offer for Aer Lingus is being reviewed while dramatic changes take place across the EU airline industry, including: (1) a large restructuring of Iberia with 4,500 job losses; (2) the takeover of Vueling by IAG, combining the Number 2 and Number 3 airlines in Spain; (3) a major restructuring of SAS including 6,000 job losses and state backed loan guarantees; and (4) the planned merger of Aegean and Olympic, the Number 1 and Number 2 airlines in Greece.

It is against this backdrop that Ryanair is proposing a merger that provides secure jobs, growth opportunities and financial benefits for all shareholders in a larger Ireland based EU carrier.

Read the local media analysis of this proposed merger from The Irish Times: CLICK HERE

Top Copyright Photo: Antony J. Best. Boeing 737-8AS EI-DCL (msn 33806) in the Dreamliner livery lands at London (Luton).

Ryanair:ย 

Aer Lingus:ย 

Bottom Copyright Photo: SM Fitzwilliams Collection. Airbus A320-214 EI-DEJ (msn 2364) taxies at the Dublin base.