Ryanair axes three routes to make way for eight new services PDF Print E-mail
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Thursday, 07 June 2007
Ryanair Holdings, the biggest low-fare airline in Europe, announced to close three routes and cut six others to make way for eight new services. Ryanair said it will close the three routes in coming November, from Shannon to Bournemouth, Lodz in Poland, and Rome.

It added, services between Shannon and Biarritz, Carcassonne, Milan, Murcia, Nantes and Venice will switch to a summer-only basis, between April and October in a bid to accommodate the eight new routes from the airport in west Ireland.

Ryanair , the Irish airline is headquartered in Dublin. However, its biggest operational base is at London Stansted Airport, it is Europe's largest low-cost carrier and it is one of the world's largest and most successful airlines, whether in terms of profits, number of flights, number of passengers flown.

Ryanair operates at one count on 460 routes to 25 countries. Ryanair is also one of Europe's most controversial companies, praised by some, criticised by others. Its supporters praise its commitment to low fares, radical management, and its willingness to challenge what it calls the 'establishment' within the airline industry. Critics, meanwhile, have attacked its trade union policies, hidden taxes and fees, and limited customer services, and charged that it practices deceptive advertising.

The new destinations from Shannon include Birmingham, Dublin, Fuerteventura, Kaunas in Lithuania, Leeds, Luton, Riga in Latvia and Tenerife. From November 2007, Ryanair will also increase the frequency of its Edinburgh service to daily and Manchester to six times a week. The airline also plans to fly to the US in the next four years, flying to secondary airports. Ryanair, Ireland’s budget airline this month forecasted that its profit would grow at the slowest rate in four years in the 2008 fiscal year as it plans to slash ticket prices to attract passengers.

Chief executive officer of the airline Michael O'Leary said the airline expects its expanded operation at Shannon to attract 1.7 million passengers annually. 'This will deliver a visitor spend of 250 million euro and support 1,700 jobs in the West,' he added.



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Last Updated ( Saturday, 16 June 2007 )
 
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