Ryanair in 2018
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Re: Ryanair in 2018
Ryanair to add 11 new winter 2018/19 routes to Edinburgh and to close its one aircraft Glasgow International base from November 2018. One aircraft, and routes to Derry, Lisbon, Sofia, Riga and Berlin, will switch from Glasgow to Edinburgh Airport.
Ryanair to add new B737-800 service from Bristol to Shannon on 17 May 2018.
Ryanair to introduce new summer 2018 service from Zadar to Frankfurt, Memmingen and Bremen, while also adding services from Frankfurt to Pula and Rijeka. In addition, it will boost frequencies on its existing services to the country.
Ryanair to add new B737-800 service from Bristol to Shannon on 17 May 2018.
Ryanair to introduce new summer 2018 service from Zadar to Frankfurt, Memmingen and Bremen, while also adding services from Frankfurt to Pula and Rijeka. In addition, it will boost frequencies on its existing services to the country.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
Re: Ryanair in 2018
Pilots call for Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary to quitsn26567 wrote: ↑26 Feb 2018, 21:42 Ryanair pan-European pilot group EERC called for the resignation of CEO Michael O’Leary, in the latest sign of strains in staff relations at the airline.
Ryanair tries to negotiate separate deals with pilots by country rather than on a European basis. It has already said it does not recognise EERC. "Divide ut imperes!"
https://t.co/OIzRCabvVB
https://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingn ... 30023.html
Re: Ryanair in 2018
From the Italian release
Milano BGY Amman
Milano BGY Faro
Milano BGY Tangeri
Milano BGY Palma
Milano MXP Kaunas
Milano MXP Tenerife
Roma CIA Aqaba
Roma CIA Baden Baden
Roma CIA Palma
Bologna Amman
Bologna Kaunas
Bologna Alicante
Bologna Manchester
Bologna Porto
Pisa Praga
Pisa Danzica
Palermo Colonia
Palermo Valencia
Catania Marrakech
Catania Siviglia
Bari Dublino
Napoli Marrakech
Napoli Copenaghen
Cagliari Baden Baden
Cagliari Porto
Cagliari Siviglia
Cagliari Valencia
Cagliari Dusseldorf Weeze
Cagliari Varsavia Modlin
Brindisi Memmingen
Brindisi Verona
Pescara Malta
Venezia Treviso Siviglia
Venezia Treviso Vilnius
Venezia Treviso Gran Canaria
Venezia Treviso Amburgo
Venezia Treviso Manchester
Milano BGY Amman
Milano BGY Faro
Milano BGY Tangeri
Milano BGY Palma
Milano MXP Kaunas
Milano MXP Tenerife
Roma CIA Aqaba
Roma CIA Baden Baden
Roma CIA Palma
Bologna Amman
Bologna Kaunas
Bologna Alicante
Bologna Manchester
Bologna Porto
Pisa Praga
Pisa Danzica
Palermo Colonia
Palermo Valencia
Catania Marrakech
Catania Siviglia
Bari Dublino
Napoli Marrakech
Napoli Copenaghen
Cagliari Baden Baden
Cagliari Porto
Cagliari Siviglia
Cagliari Valencia
Cagliari Dusseldorf Weeze
Cagliari Varsavia Modlin
Brindisi Memmingen
Brindisi Verona
Pescara Malta
Venezia Treviso Siviglia
Venezia Treviso Vilnius
Venezia Treviso Gran Canaria
Venezia Treviso Amburgo
Venezia Treviso Manchester
Re: Ryanair in 2018
At this morning's press conference, MOL revealed that Ryanair would like to increase the number of its stationed aircraft in Brussels from four possibly to eight, once it takes delivery of the B737 MAX200s in 2019. These aircraft make less noise, which will enable additional departures between 6 and 7 am when the noise standard is more stringent.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
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Re: Ryanair in 2018
I'll believe it when I see itsn26567 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2018, 21:06 At this morning's press conference, MOL revealed that Ryanair would like to increase the number of its stationed aircraft in Brussels from four possibly to eight, once it takes delivery of the B737 MAX200s in 2019. These aircraft make less noise, which will enable additional departures between 6 and 7 am when the noise standard is more stringent.
Re: Ryanair in 2018
They said also that they wanted to be bigger than SN this year. Is this then based on market share or absolute numbers or both?
Re: Ryanair in 2018
There is no way they can become larger than SN this year: 8.3m passengers will always be lower than SN.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
Re: Ryanair in 2018
Ryanair Portuguese cabin crew confirmed a strike set for 29 March, 01 and 04 April 2018.
Ryanair signed the first formal accord recognizing the Italian pilots’ union ANPAC.
https://www.aviation24.be/airlines/ryana ... agreement/
Ryanair signed the first formal accord recognizing the Italian pilots’ union ANPAC.
https://www.aviation24.be/airlines/ryana ... agreement/
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
Re: Ryanair in 2018
After W6, Vy, now Fr is interested in VIE
From Ch-Aviation
Ryanair (FR, Dublin Int'l) is weighing up the possibility of launching flights out of Vienna within the next 12 to 18 months, CEO Michael O'Leary said during the annual Airlines for Europe (A4E) gathering in Brussels.
"There's new management in Vienna airport, they're making some very progressive moves towards finally introducing some new route incentives and some traffic growth incentives and those are very interesting," O'Leary was quoted by Reuters.
According to the ch-aviation capacity module, the Irish LCC currently serves the Austrian capital out of Bratislava, located some 50 kilometres from Vienna. Ryanair operates a total of 55 weekly departures to 16 destinations out of the Slovak capital's airport, including 12 weekly departures to London Stansted and seven to Dublin Int'l. Ryanair is currently by far the largest operator at Bratislava with 70.9% share of weekly capacity out of the airport.
Ryanair's move would follow other LCC carriers which have announced growth at Vienna. Wizz Air will launch its inaugural services out of the Austrian gateway in late April 2018, following which it will establish a base at the airport in June. IAG International Airlines Group has also announced it is planning to develop its low-cost unit Vueling Airlines' presence in Vienna following its recent unsuccessful bid for Niki. For its part, LaudaMotion, Niki's successor, has not, as yet, announced any routes out of Vienna.
easyJet already operates 89 weekly departures out of Vienna, which is the formal base of its European unit, easyJet Europe. It is also a significant base for Eurowings, Lufthansa Group's low-cost unit, which operates 189 weekly departures out of Vienna. The largest operator at Vienna is another Lufthansa Group subsidiary, Austrian Airlines.
From Ch-Aviation
Ryanair (FR, Dublin Int'l) is weighing up the possibility of launching flights out of Vienna within the next 12 to 18 months, CEO Michael O'Leary said during the annual Airlines for Europe (A4E) gathering in Brussels.
"There's new management in Vienna airport, they're making some very progressive moves towards finally introducing some new route incentives and some traffic growth incentives and those are very interesting," O'Leary was quoted by Reuters.
According to the ch-aviation capacity module, the Irish LCC currently serves the Austrian capital out of Bratislava, located some 50 kilometres from Vienna. Ryanair operates a total of 55 weekly departures to 16 destinations out of the Slovak capital's airport, including 12 weekly departures to London Stansted and seven to Dublin Int'l. Ryanair is currently by far the largest operator at Bratislava with 70.9% share of weekly capacity out of the airport.
Ryanair's move would follow other LCC carriers which have announced growth at Vienna. Wizz Air will launch its inaugural services out of the Austrian gateway in late April 2018, following which it will establish a base at the airport in June. IAG International Airlines Group has also announced it is planning to develop its low-cost unit Vueling Airlines' presence in Vienna following its recent unsuccessful bid for Niki. For its part, LaudaMotion, Niki's successor, has not, as yet, announced any routes out of Vienna.
easyJet already operates 89 weekly departures out of Vienna, which is the formal base of its European unit, easyJet Europe. It is also a significant base for Eurowings, Lufthansa Group's low-cost unit, which operates 189 weekly departures out of Vienna. The largest operator at Vienna is another Lufthansa Group subsidiary, Austrian Airlines.
Re: Ryanair in 2018
They may have such ambitions, but I read in the press they will offer some 8.3m seats in Belgium 'this year', which in ryanairspeak actually means from Q2/18 till the end of Q1/19 (so shifted by 3 months); Brussels will likely fly over 10m customers over the (earlier) calendar year 2018, so it's not even close?!
In fact the gap seems to be widening and ryanair are currently loosing market share even with this result, so I wonder why they'd make such knowingly wrong claims, although a fair bit of trumpism has never been unfamiliar to Ryanair's communication style of course.
Besides, with Brussels Airlines now an integral part of Eurowings, I wonder why Brussels hasn't started counting customers of Eurowings to/from our country as well? Ryanair adds all of their Belgian passengers up too, regardless whether they fly on Belgian based planes or not.
Re: Ryanair in 2018
Why not go one step further and consider the whole Lufthansa Group as one airline vs Ryanair?Inquirer wrote: ↑09 Mar 2018, 08:52
Besides, with Brussels Airlines now an integral part of Eurowings, I wonder why Brussels hasn't started counting customers of Eurowings to/from our country as well? Ryanair adds all of their Belgian passengers up too, regardless whether they fly on Belgian based planes or not.
Ryanair still communicates being "Europe's number one airline", although in 2017 they carried 129 million passengers vs the 130 million of the Lufthansa Group.
Lufthansa Group should also consolidate its figures for Brussels Airport: SN + LH + EW + LX + OS. I think that doing so would push them above the 50% market share at BRU, and perhaps even on the Belgian market.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
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Re: Ryanair in 2018
With BRU serving roughly 75% of the Belgian market, an airline (group) that only operates from BRU would need at least a 67% market share in order to capture 50% of the whole Belgian market. I don't think the LH Group is anywhere close to that.
Re: Ryanair in 2018
In the meantime, no one speaks about all the daily BRU-Malta flights being transfered to Charleroi as from 25 March (why???), so that's another lost route from Brussels together with Hamburg last year and Bratislava 2y ago.sn26567 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2018, 21:06 At this morning's press conference, MOL revealed that Ryanair would like to increase the number of its stationed aircraft in Brussels from four possibly to eight, once it takes delivery of the B737 MAX200s in 2019. These aircraft make less noise, which will enable additional departures between 6 and 7 am when the noise standard is more stringent.
So, ok, Amman and Marrakesh are added but it's at the very end of the year and it's each two flights a week, so nothing to be compared with those daily (Malta) or twice-daily routes (Hamburg)! Plus, so many routes have less frequency than before (Rome, Berlin...).
I'm puzzled, are they wanting to grow or not?!?
Re: Ryanair in 2018
well, for me an airline is not the same as a group.sn26567 wrote: ↑09 Mar 2018, 10:55Why not go one step further and consider the whole Lufthansa Group as one airline vs Ryanair?Inquirer wrote: ↑09 Mar 2018, 08:52
Besides, with Brussels Airlines now an integral part of Eurowings, I wonder why Brussels hasn't started counting customers of Eurowings to/from our country as well? Ryanair adds all of their Belgian passengers up too, regardless whether they fly on Belgian based planes or not.
Ryanair still communicates being "Europe's number one airline", although in 2017 they carried 129 million passengers vs the 130 million of the Lufthansa Group.
If you fly LH or Eurowings, it's definitely not the same in-flight experience, as each airline has its own "image brand" etc.
For me, FR is the biggest airline in Europe and the 5th in the world.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World%27s ... rs_carried
Re: Ryanair in 2018
They’re not under one management, They dont have the same philosophy, they’re not one airline ....sn26567 wrote: ↑09 Mar 2018, 10:55Why not go one step further and consider the whole Lufthansa Group as one airline vs Ryanair?Inquirer wrote: ↑09 Mar 2018, 08:52
Besides, with Brussels Airlines now an integral part of Eurowings, I wonder why Brussels hasn't started counting customers of Eurowings to/from our country as well? Ryanair adds all of their Belgian passengers up too, regardless whether they fly on Belgian based planes or not.
Ryanair still communicates being "Europe's number one airline", although in 2017 they carried 129 million passengers vs the 130 million of the Lufthansa Group.
Lufthansa Group should also consolidate its figures for Brussels Airport: SN + LH + EW + LX + OS. I think that doing so would push them above the 50% market share at BRU, and perhaps even on the Belgian market.
Re: Ryanair in 2018
Ryanair is close to reaching an agreement with the Spanish pilots union, something that could happen in late March 2018
André
ex Sabena #26567
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Re: Trivia 2018 (miscellaneous news)
Apparently Ryanair will reopen Ukraine routes upcoming winter to Lviv and Kiev-Borispol.
There is a route from Weeze to Lviv.
(Routes are already loaded in their booking system)
There is a route from Weeze to Lviv.
(Routes are already loaded in their booking system)
Re: Ryanair in 2018
https://corporate.ryanair.com/news/ryan ... ?market=ieRyanair wrote:Ryanair’s Kiev winter 2018 schedule will deliver:
– 10 new routes: Barcelona (4 wkly), Bratislava (3), Gdansk (2), Krakow (3), London Stansted (5), Poznan (2), Stockholm S (3), Vilnius (3), Warsaw M (4) & Wroclaw (3)
– 32 weekly flights
– 550,000 customers p.a.
Ryanair’s Lviv winter 2018 schedule will deliver:
– 5 new routes: Dusseldorf W (3 wkly), Krakow (3), London S (3), Memmingen (2) & Warsaw M (3)
– 14 weekly flights
– 250,000 customers p.a.
Re: Ryanair in 2018
Air Malta has reached an agreement with Ryanair to be included on the latter’s website, allowing passengers to book flights directly from there.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
Re: Ryanair in 2018
Ryanair might face Portuguese cabin crew strike on 29 March, 01 and 02 April 2018 over disagreements with the carrier.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567