Tag Archives: Ryanair

The first Ryanair Boeing 737-8 MAX 8 (200) finally departs from Seattle

1st MAX, delivered on June 16, 2021

Ryanair has taken delivery of its first (delayed) Boeing 737-8 MAX 8 (200). The 197-seat high-density aircraft (the pictured EI-HEN, top) departed from Boeing Field this morning shortly after 1 am local time. It is expected to arrive later today in Dublin.

Ryanair on June 16 issued this statement:

Ryanair on June 16 took delivery of its first Boeing 737-8200 โ€œGamechangerโ€ aircraft in Seattle, Washington. The aircraft flew overnight from Seattle and will land in Dublin Airport later this afternoon. This is the first delivery of Ryanairโ€™s 210 firm order of these revolutionary โ€œGamechangerโ€ aircraft, which is an investment in new technology, valued at over $22 billion. These new aircraft will carry 4% more passengers but reduce fuel consumption by 16% per seat, lower noise emissions by 40% and lower CO2 emissions by a similar amount.

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

โ€œWe are delighted to take delivery of our first new technology Gamechanger aircraft. These new Boeing 737 aircraft will help Ryanair lower costs, cut fuel consumption and lower noise and CO2 emissions as we invest heavily in new technology to deepen our environmental commitment as Europeโ€™s greenest, cleanest major airline. Each 737 aircraft offers 197 seats (compared to our 189-seat current 737 fleet). However, our customers will enjoy more leg room, new Boeing โ€œSky Interiorsโ€ and lower fares, while reducing their environmental footprint by switching to these new aircraft.

Due to regrettable delivery delays, we expect to take delivery of just 12 of these aircraft during Summer 2021, with 6 delivering in Ryanair colors and 6 in Malta Air colors.

Ryanair expects to take delivery of an additional 50 of these 737 โ€œGamechangerโ€ aircraft before Summer 2022, which will enable the Ryanair Group to rebound strongly, offering new routes, lower fares, and rapid traffic recovery to many partner airports across Europe as the tourism industry rebuilds from the devastating impact of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020/2021โ€.

Top Copyright Photo: Ryanair Boeing 737-8 MAX 8 (200) EI-HEN (msn 62301) PAE (Nick Dean). Image: 953050.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

Ryanair welcomes EU Court ruling on Condor state aid

1st MAX, delivered on June 16, 2021

Ryanair today welcomed the EU General Courtโ€™s annulment of the European Commissionโ€™s approval of State aid by Germany to Condor. ย In April 2020, the German government granted a โ‚ฌ550m loan to Condor, which had already benefited from a โ‚ฌ380m rescue loan from Germany in 2019 following the bankruptcy of its parent company, Thomas Cook.

While the Covid-19 crisis has caused damage to all airlines that contribute to the economy and the connectivity of Germany, the German government decided to support only its inefficient โ€œnationalโ€ airlines, including Condor.

Ryanair referred the European Commissionโ€™s approval of this โ‚ฌ550m illegal subsidy to Condor to the EU General Court in 2020.

A Ryanair spokesperson said:

โ€œThe German government aid to Condor โ€“ both in 2019 and 2020 โ€“ went against the fundamental principles of EU law and has distorted the market to the detriment of consumers.ย Todayโ€™s ruling is an important victory for consumers and competition.

During the Covid-19 pandemic overย โ‚ฌ30 billion in discriminatory State subsidies has been gifted to EU flag carriers.ย  Unless halted by the EU Courts in line with todayโ€™s ruling, the effects of market distortion caused by this State aid will be felt for decades.ย  If Europe is to emerge from this crisis with a functioning single market, the European Commission must stand up to national governments and stop rubber stamping discriminatory State aid to inefficient national airlines.โ€

Top Copyright Photo: Ryanair Boeing 737-8 MAX 8 (200) EI-HEN (msn 62301) PAE (Nick Dean). Image: 953050.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

Ryanair to double its presence in Rome Fiumicino this summer

Ryanair has announced the addition of three based Boeing 737-800 aircraft, six new routes and over 65 flights every week from Rome Fiumicino to a host of domestic and international destinations.

Ryanair remains committed to delivering connectivity to Rome and expects its Summer โ€™21 schedule, including 78 routes from both Rome airports in total and over 470 departing flights per week,.

Ryanairโ€™s Rome Summer โ€˜21 schedule will deliver (Fiumicino and Ciampino):

  • Up to 14 based aircraft, including three additional based aircraft in Fiumicino from August
  • 78 routes in total (six domestic / 72 international)*
  • 11 new routes
  • Over 470 departing flights per week across both airports
  • Connections to holiday destinations such as Malta & Rhodes, city breaks to Madrid & Porto, as well as domestic connections to Cagliari & Trapani.

Ryanairโ€™s Rome Fiumicino Extended Summer โ€˜21 schedule will deliver:

  • Up to six based aircraft, including three additional based aircraft from August โ€“ a $300m investment
  • Up to 180 direct jobs and over 2,200 indirect jobs
  • 21 routes in total (four domestic / 17 international) *
  • Six new routes, all commencing in August:

 

Route Departing Flights Per Week Route Departing Flights Per Week
Chania 3 Santorini 4
Fuerteventura 3 Tenerife South 3
Liverpool 4 Zakynthos 4

 

  • Extra flights on eight routes:

 

Route Departing Flights Per Week Route Departing Flights Per Week
Barcelona 14 (+5) Catania 49 (+7)
Bari 18 (+4) Kyiv 7 (+2)
Brindisi 14 (+7) Palermo 35 (+7)
Brussels 14 (+11) Vienna 7 (+4)

 

  • Connections to holiday destinations such as Malaga & Malta, city breaks to Seville & Vienna, as well as domestic connections to Brindisi & Palermo.

 

Ryanair condemns UK Government moving Portugal from Green to Amber List, with no basis in science or public health

Ryanair issued this statement:

Ryanair condemned the decision by the UK Government of Boris Johnson to move Portugal to the Amber Travel List (from Green), since this decision has no basis in public health or medical science.

This bizarre decision now requires vaccinated UK citizens returning from Portugal to quarantine for 14 days, despite the fact that 75% of UK adults have now received a Covid vaccine. Vaccine rates in Portugal are rapidly catching up with UK levels, with over 40% of Portugalโ€™s adults having now received a Covid vaccine.

The decision to move Portugal from the Green to Amber list has also no basis in medical or public health when Covid infection rates in Portugal are also identical to UK rates (at just 50 cases per 100,000). Covid case rates in Portugal are declining, as they are in the UK, thanks to the successful rollout of the Covid vaccines. Ryanair also condemned Transport Minister Grant Shapps failure to add other destinations to the UK Green List, such as Malta, which has now overtaken the UK with almost 80% of its population receiving a Covid vaccine, and Covid case rates in Malta are just 12 per 100,000 population, less than 25% of the rate in the UK.

Ryanair also called for other Islands, such as the Balearics and the Canaries, to be immediately added to the UK Green List, when their Covid case rates are running at approx. 30 per 100,000, are considerably lower than UK Covid case rates.

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

โ€œBoris Johnsonโ€™s Government is again mismanaging the Covid recovery. This stop-go-stop approach to short haul travel in Europe is inexplicable and unjustified when 75% of the UK population has now received a Covid vaccine. There is no medical or public health reason for moving Portugal from the Green to the Amber List, when its Covid case rates are as low as the UK at just 50 per 100,000 population, and Portugalโ€™s vaccine rollout program has exceeded 40% and is rapidly catching up with UK levels.

ย UK citizens who have already booked travel to Portugal deserve an explanation why vaccinated UK citizens are required to quarantine when returning from a country which has similarly low Covid case rates as the UK. Transport Minister Shapps should also explain why those countries such as Malta, or Islands such as the Balearics and the Canaries, who have significantly lower Covid case rates than the UK, have not been added to the UK Green List to allow UK families a well-earned holiday in June, July and August, particularlyย when those UK families have already been vaccinated.

ย This is sadly further evidence that the Johnson Government just makes it up as they go along, and this stop-go-stop approach to international travel is damaging for the UK and for millions of UK families. Ryanair calls today on Boris Johnson and Grant Shapps to immediately return Portugal to the Green List, and add those other low risk destinations such as Malta, the Balearics and the Canary Islands, so that British families can plan their holidays for Summer 2021 without being repeatedly disrupted and mismanaged by Boris Johnson and his chaotic Government Administration.โ€

Ryanair reports a jump in traffic in May, calls on the UK to open up more international travel

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EXF (msn 40322) (Costa Brava - Pirineau de Girona) PMI (Ton Jochems). Image: 943422.

Ryanair reports its May traffic jumped from 700,000 to 1.8 million guests in May with this traffic report:

79% Load Factor As Covid Vaccines See EU Recovery Begin

Ryanair Holdings plc today (2 June) released May traffic statistics as follows:

ย  ย 2020 2021 ย ย ย ย  Growth(1)
Ryanair Group ย 0.07m 1.8m โ€“
ย  ย  ย 
Rolling Annual 121.0m ย 30.2m ย (72% LF) -75%

ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย ย 

Ryanair operated over 12,000 flights in May with a 79% load factor.

(1)ย Ryanair carried 1.0m passengers in April 2021.

In other news, Ryanair called on Minister for Transport Grant Shapps to open up international travel from all EU countries in his next revision of the UKโ€™s green list on June 3, 2021.

Ryanair also urged Mr. Shapps to abolish travel restrictions for everyone that has been fully vaccinated and to scrap the current requirement to present a negative PCR test when coming back from EU green countries, which only adds cost and stress to UK citizens despite returning from low-risk EU destinations.

European holiday hotspots like Spain, Greece and Italy have already opened their doors to UK tourists โ€“ as UK adult vaccinations hit 75% and with the EU on track to hit the 70% target by the end of June, infections are dropping and restriction-free travel within Europe should be allowed this Summer.

Having added Portugal to its travel green list in May, UK families have been flying in their droves to Lisbon, the Algarve and Porto. Despite the lack of clarity around the amber list, hundreds of thousands of UK holiday makers have already booked to sunshine favorites Spain, Italy and the Greek islands for June, July and August. In order to provide as much flexibility as possible, Ryanair has extended its zero-change fee for all new bookings made before September 30, for travel by December 31, 2021, giving customers flexibility and peace of mind should their plans change.

Ryanairโ€™s Michael Oโ€™Leary said:

ย โ€œThe highly successful UK vaccine rollout has already enabled hundreds and thousands of British families to book their flights to Portugal this summer, and today we call on Minister Grant Shapps to include all EU countries in the next revision of the UKโ€™s green list so UK holiday makers can travel restriction-free to the beaches of Spain, Greece and Italy โ€“ all of whom have opened their doors to British visitors this summer.

The UK Govt must scrap the nonsensical requirement of PCR tests for those returning from low-risk (green) countries. There is no point in setting up a traffic light system if โ€˜greenโ€™ still requires additional measures that significantly add to the cost of a family trip. There is no justification for the UK Govt to delay the removal of all travel restrictions for those who have been fully vaccinated when research from Public Health England has demonstrated that two doses of the C-19 vaccines are highly effective against the Indian variant.

We look forward to seeing all of Europe open to restriction-free travel for British families this summer, and to welcoming millions of British guests on board very soonโ€.

Top Copyright Photo: Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EXF (msn 40322) (Costa Brava – Pirineau de Girona) PMI (Ton Jochems). Image: 943422.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

CNN: How Belarus ‘hijacking’ has redrawn Europe’s air map

European airlines, when they can, are avoiding flying over Belarus as a result of the Ryanair ‘hijacking’.

From CNN:

How Belarus ‘hijacking’ will affect flights in Europe | CNN Travel

Ryanair flight FR4978 is diverted with a Mig-29 escort to Minsk to arrest a blogger!

The government of Belarus forced a Ryanair flight – flight FR4978,ย  (with fighters) to divert to Minsk in order to arrest an opposition blogger who has been critical of authoritarian president, Roman Protasevich.

The government in Minsk confirmed that Alexander Lukashenko ordered his military to scramble a Mig-29 fighter to escort the plane to Minsk.

Ryanair said the closest airport was Minsk and that the situation had been โ€œout of its handsโ€.

The Athens, Greece to Vilnius, Lithuania flight was flying in Belarusian airspace when it was force to fly to Minsk but was actually closer to Vilnius.

Source: Flightradar 24.

Ryanair’s statement:

European Union statement:

Communiquรฉ of European Council President Charles Michel on the incident involving a forced landing of a Ryanair flight in Minsk, Belarus, on 23 May

I condemn in the strongest possible terms the forced landing of a Ryanair flight in Minsk, Belarus, on 23 May 2021 and the reported detention by Belarusian authorities of journalist Raman Pratasevich.

I call on Belarus authorities to immediately release the detained passenger and to fully guarantee his rights.

EU leaders will discuss this unprecedented incident tomorrow during the European Council.

The incident ย will not remain without consequences.

More from the BBC: Belarus ‘diverts Ryanair flight to arrest journalist’, opposition says – BBC News

Ryanair welcomes EU Court rulings on Air France-KLM And TAP state aid

Ryanair welcomed the EU General Courtโ€™s rulings that State aid measures favoring Air France-KLM and TAP were in breach of EU law.ย  The enormous amounts of State aid received by each airline are set out below:

Airline โ‚ฌ
Air France-KLM 3.4 billion
TAP 1.2 billion

While the Covid-19 crisis has caused damage to all airlines that contribute to the economies and the connectivity of the Netherlands and Portugal, the governments of these countries decided to support only their national flag carriers. Ryanair appealed the European Commissionโ€™s approvals of these illegal State subsidies to the EU General Court in 2020.

Ryanairโ€™s spokesperson said:

โ€œOne of the EUโ€™s greatest achievements is the creation of a single market for air transport.ย  The European Commissionโ€™s approvals of State aid to Air France-KLM and TAP went against the fundamental principles of EU law and reversed the clock on the process of liberalisation in air transport by rewarding inefficiency and encouraging unfair competition.ย 

During the Covid-19 pandemic overย โ‚ฌ30 billionย in discriminatory State subsidies has been gifted to EU flag carriers.ย  Unless halted by the EU Courts in line with todayโ€™s rulings, this State aid spree will distort the market for decades to come.ย  If Europe is to emerge from this crisis with a functioning single market, airlines must be allowed to compete on a level playing field.ย ย ย Todayโ€™s rulings in 2 of more than 20 appeals filed to date before the General Court are an important victory for consumers and competition.โ€

Discriminatory State subsidies given by EU Member States or planned to be given are set out here:

Air France-KLM โ‚ฌ14.4bn
Lufthansa Group โ‚ฌ11bn
Alitalia โ‚ฌ3.5bn
SAS โ‚ฌ1.3bn
TAP โ‚ฌ1.6bn
Finnair โ‚ฌ1.2bn
Norwegian โ‚ฌ0.8bn
LOT โ‚ฌ0.65bn
Condor โ‚ฌ0.6bn
Air Europa โ‚ฌ0.5bn

Ryanair reports full year loss of โ‚ฌ815 million as traffic falls 81% due to COVID-19 travel restrictions

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EBC (msn 37520) BSL (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 943420.

Ryanair Holdings plc today (May 17) reported a full year loss of โ‚ฌ815 million (ยฃ702 million) ($990.9 million), compared to a profit of โ‚ฌ1,002 million in the previous year. Features of FY21 included:

  • FY21 traffic fell 81% from 149m to 27.5m due to Covid-19 restrictions.
  • Liquidity preservation prioritized with โ‚ฌ3.15bn cash at year end (31 Mar.).
  • Cost reductions implemented across all Group airlines.
  • Unprecedented backlog of Covid customer requests/refunds processed.
  • Job losses minimized via engagement with our people & unions.
  • B737-8200 โ€œGamechangerโ€ firm order increased to 210 aircraft (from 135).
  • CDP awarded very strong (first time) โ€œB-โ€ climate protection score.
  • Non-EU shareholder voting rights were restricted post Brexit.
FY end 31 Mar. 2020 31 Mar. 2021 Change
Customers 148.6m 27.5m -81%
Load Factor 95% 71% -24pts
Revenue โ‚ฌ8.49bn โ‚ฌ1.64bn -81%
Op. Costs โ‚ฌ7.37bn โ‚ฌ2.48bn -66%
PAT/(Net Loss)* โ‚ฌ1,002m (โ‚ฌ815m) n/m

 

*Non-IFRS financial measure, excl. FY21 โ‚ฌ200m except. hedge ineffectiveness charge (FY20: โ‚ฌ353m charge).ย 

COVID-19:

FY21 was the most challenging in Ryanairโ€™s 35-year history.ย  Covid-19 saw traffic collapse, almost overnight, from 149m to just 27.5m as many European Govts. (with little notice or co-ordination) imposed flight bans, travel restrictions and national lockdowns. There was a partial recovery during summer 2020, as initial lockdowns eased, however a second Covid-19 wave in Europe followed quickly in the autumn with a third wave in spring.ย  This created enormous disruptions and uncertainty for both our customers and our people, as they suffered constantly changing Govt. guidelines, travel bans and restrictions.ย  Ryanair responded promptly, and effectively, to this crisis, by working hard to assist millions of customers with flight changes, refunds and changed travel plans.ย  We minimized job losses through agreed pay cuts and participation in Govt. job support schemes, while at the same time keeping our pilots, cabin crew and aircraft current and ready to resume service once normality returns.

The Covid-19 crisis precipitated the collapse of a number of EU airlines including Flybe, Norwegian, Germanwings and Level and substantial capacity cuts at many others.ย  It sparked a tsunami of State Aid from EU Govts. to their insolvent flag carriers including Alitalia, AirFrance/KLM, LOT, Lufthansa, SAS, TAP and others, which will distort EU competition and prop up high cost, inefficient, flag carriers for many years.ย  We expect intra-European air travel capacity to be materially lower for the foreseeable future.ย  This will create opportunities for Ryanair to extend airport growth incentives, as the Group takes delivery of 210 new (lower cost) Boeing 737s.ย  We are encouraged by the recent release of multiple Covid-19 vaccines and hope that their rollout will facilitate the resumption of intra-Europe air travel and tourism this summer.ย  If, as is presently predicted, most European populations are vaccinated by Sept., then we believe that we can look forward to a strong recovery in air travel, jobs and tourism in H2 of the current fiscal year (FY22). The recent strong increases in weekly bookings since early April suggests that this recovery has already begun.

THE ENVIRONMENT:

Ryanair has shown that we can grow low fare traffic while reducing our impact on the environment.ย ย  Every passenger that switches to Ryanair from one of Europeโ€™s legacy airlines cuts their COโ‚‚ emissions by almost 50% per flight.ย  Over the next 5-years Ryanairโ€™s traffic will grow to 200m p.a.ย  This will be achieved in a manner that balances the desire for low fares with the need for sustainable flying.ย  Ryanairโ€™s $20bn+ investment in new technology aircraft will be pivotal in achieving this ambition.ย  The new B737-8200ย โ€œGamechangerโ€ย aircraft offers 4% more seats, but delivers a 16% lower fuel burn and 40% lower noise emissions which will help Ryanair to lower its COโ‚‚ and noise footprint over the next decade.

The Group continues to work actively with the EU, fuel suppliers and aircraft manufacturers to incentivize sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) use.ย  We are working with A4E and the EU Commission to accelerate reform to the Single European Sky, so that we can minimize ATC delays and the resulting avoidable oil consumption and COโ‚‚ emissions.ย  In 2020 Ryanair received a (first time) โ€œB-โ€ climate protection rating from CDP[1].ย  While this is a strong inaugural rating, highlighting Ryanairโ€™s excellent environmental performance and governance, the Group is committed to improving this score over the next 2 years.ย  In April, Ryanair established a Sustainable Aviation Research Centre partnership with Trinity College Dublin to help accelerate the development of SAF.ย  Ryanairโ€™s goal is to power 12.5% of its flights with SAF by 2030.ย  This, together with the Groupโ€™s investment in new Gamechanger aircraft will help Ryanair achieve its target of lowering COโ‚‚ per passenger/km by 10% to just 60 grams by 2030.

FY21 BUSINESS REVIEW:

Revenue & Costs

FY21 revenue fell by 81% to โ‚ฌ1.64bn, in line with the fall in traffic to just 27.5m from 149m (pre Covid-19).ย  Ancillary revenue delivered a solid performance as more guests chose priority boarding and reserved seating, resulting in an 11% increase in per passenger spend to almost โ‚ฌ22. FY21 cost performance was strong, falling 66%.ย  Due to an 81% reduction in traffic and aircraft delivery delays, the Group recorded a โ‚ฌ200m ineffectiveness charge on fuel and currency hedges in FY21.

During the past year substantial work has been undertaken to right size the Groupโ€™s long-term cost leadership.ย  This process commenced with significant cuts in senior management pay and the cancellation of FY21 management bonus payments this year.ย  Group airlines negotiated modest pay cuts with our people and their unions that minimized job losses but allow for pay restoration over years 3 to 5 under multi-year pay agreements.ย  Our Route Development teams continue to work with airport partners across Europe, and have negotiated lower airport costs, traffic recovery incentives and the extension of many low cost airport growth deals โ€“ incl., for example, long term extensions of low-cost growth deals in London Stansted (to 2028), Milan Bergamo (to 2028) & Brussels Charleroi (to 2030). In Dec. the Group increased its firm order for the B737-8200 Gamechanger from 135 to 210 aircraft while securing further, modest, price discounts.ย  Reasonable and fair compensation was also agreed with Boeing for the 2-year delivery delays to these aircraft.ย  The Gamechanger will, we believe, further widen the cost gap between Ryanair and all other European airlines for the next decade.ย  These new aircraft have 4% more seats, 16% lower fuel burn and 40% lower noise emissions and will enable the Ryanair Group to grow to 200m passengers p.a. over the next 5 years. Ryanair hopes to take delivery of its first Gamechanger aircraft in late May and hopes to have over 60 Gamechangers in the fleet before the peak S.22.

Balance Sheet & Liquidity

The balance sheet remains one of the strongest in the industry with a BBB credit rating (S&P and Fitch), โ‚ฌ3.15bn cash at 31 Mar. and over 85% of the B737 fleet being unencumbered. Since Mar. 2020, the Group has lowered cash burn by cutting costs, participating in EU Govt. payroll support schemes, cancelling share buybacks and deferring non-essential capex.ย  Over the past year, the Group successfully raised c.โ‚ฌ1.95bn in new finance (incl. โ‚ฌ400m share placing, โ‚ฌ850m eurobond and ยฃ600m CCFF) and cash was further boosted by supplier reimbursements during the year.ย  This financial strength enables the Group to capitalise on the many growth opportunities that will be available post Covid-19.

EU OWNERSHIP & CONTROL POST-BREXIT:

As previously advised, Ryanair has restricted voting rights of non-EU shareholders (now including UK nationals) from 1 Jan. 2021 to protect its EU airline licences post-Brexit.ย  A long-standing prohibition on non-EU citizens purchasing Ryanairโ€™s ordinary shares now also extends to UK nationals, which will ensure a steady increase in the ย Companyโ€™s EU shareholding (currently approx. 1/3 of economic rights but 100% of voting rights).ย  We expect these restrictions will remain in place for the foreseeable future until the balance in favour of EU shareholders is restored or the EU & UK agree a less restrictive airline ownership and control regime than the current 50%+ nationality rule which dates back to the 1940s.ย  Meanwhile, UK nationals and other non-EU investors may continue to invest only in ADRs which are listed on NASDAQ.

OUTLOOK:

FY22 continues to be challenging, with uncertainty around when and where Covid lockdowns and travel restrictions will be eased.ย  The Group expects Q1 traffic to be heavily curtailed to between 5m and 6m guests.ย  With a very close-in booking curve, visibility for the remainder of FY22 is close to zero although bookings have jumped significantly from a very low base since week 1 of April.ย  It is therefore impossible to provide meaningful FY22 guidance at this time.ย  However, as recently announced, we think that FY22 traffic is likely to be towards the lower end of our previously guided range of 80m to 120m passengers.ย  We also (cautiously) believe that the likely outcome for FY22 is currently close to breakeven โ€“ assuming that a successful rollout of vaccines this summer allows a timely easing of European Govt. travel restrictions on intra-European traffic in time for the peak travel period of Jul./Aug./Sept.

As we look beyond the Covid-19 crisis, and the successful completion of vaccination roll outs, the Ryanair Group expects to have a much improved cost base and a very strong balance sheet.ย  We will also benefit from a reduced fleet cost for the next decade as we take more deliveries of our B737 โ€œGamechangerโ€ aircraft which will materially improve revenues with 4% more seats while substantially reducing unit costs, especially fuel. This will enable the Group to fund lower fares and capitalize on the many growth and market share opportunities that are now available across Europe, especially where competitor airlines have substantially cut capacity or failed. The Group expects to benefit from a strong rebound of pent up travel demand through the second half of 2021, and looks forward to returning to pre-Covid growth in summer 2022 with the help of the Gamechanger aircraft and new bases (incl. those recently announced in Billund, Riga, Stockholm, Zadar & Zagreb). Ryanair is committed to delivering this growth in an environmentally sustainable manner (which reduces both fuel consumption and COโ‚‚ emissions per passenger) while at the same time improving its industry leading customer service and customer experience.

[1] CDP โ€“ Carbon Disclosure Project is an independent, non-profit, global environmental reporting organization.

Top Copyright Photo: Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EBC (msn 37520) BSL (Paul Bannwarth). Image: 943420.

Ryanair aircraft slide show:

Ryanair announces more flights to Portugal after making the Green List

Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EXF (msn 40322) (Costa Brava - Pirineau de Girona) PMI (Ton Jochems). Image: 943422.

Ryanair has announced even more flights to Portugal, with over 175,000 extra seats from May 17, 2021 as the country makes it onto the UKโ€™s green listed destinations.

Route Departing Flights Per Week
Stansted Faro 17 (+16)
Lisbon 14 (+11)
Porto 14 (+11)
Manchester Faro 14 (+12)
Lisbon 4 (+4)
Porto 3 (+3)
Birmingham Faro 3 (+3)
Leeds Faro 3 (+3)
Bournemouth Faro 3 (+3)
Bristol Faro 3 (+3)
East Midlands Faro 3 (+3)
Liverpool Faro 3 (+3)

Ryanairโ€™s Director of Marketing, Dara Brady, said:

โ€œWe are very pleased to announce 175,000 extra seats to Portugal on the back of the UKโ€™s green list. With quarantine-free travel now permitted to the likes of Faro, Lisbon and Porto, even more flights have been added to our UK schedule in order to meet the demand from our customers.

The UK Summer 2021 schedule comprises 480 destinations, having recently launched 26 new routes and with more to be added as restrictions relax throughout Europe over the summer months. UK families can book a well-earned summer holiday safe in the knowledge that if their plans change, they can move their travel dates up to two times with a zero-change fee up until the end of October 2021.

Top Copyright Photo: Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS WL EI-EXF (msn 40322) (Costa Brava – Pirineau de Girona) PMI (Ton Jochems). Image: 943422.

Ryanair aircraft slide show: