Ryanair launches flights to Tel Aviv (TLV)
https://www.aviation24.be/airlines/ryanair ... te-paphos/
Ryanair in 2017
Ryanair in 2016
Ryanair in 2015
Ryanair in 2014
Ryanair in 2013
Ryanair in 2012
Ryanair in 2017
Moderator: Latest news team
Re: Ryanair in 2017
In summer 2017, Ryanair will expand its London Stansted schedule as follows:
- 9 new routes to: Naples (daily), Copenhagen (3 daily), Béziers (3 wkly), Cagliari (3 wkly), Clermont-Ferrand (2 wkly), Grenoble (3 wkly), Nice (daily), Nimes (4 wkly) & Strasbourg (2 wkly)
- More flights to: Bergerac (2 daily), Biarritz (11 wkly), Bordeaux (daily), Carcassonne (12 wkly) Dinard (daily), La Rochelle (daily), Lamezia Terme (5 wkly), Limoges (10 wkly), Lourdes (5 wkly), Marseille (12 wkly), Perpignan (9 wkly), Porto (16 wkly) & Toulouse (2 daily)
- 9 new routes to: Naples (daily), Copenhagen (3 daily), Béziers (3 wkly), Cagliari (3 wkly), Clermont-Ferrand (2 wkly), Grenoble (3 wkly), Nice (daily), Nimes (4 wkly) & Strasbourg (2 wkly)
- More flights to: Bergerac (2 daily), Biarritz (11 wkly), Bordeaux (daily), Carcassonne (12 wkly) Dinard (daily), La Rochelle (daily), Lamezia Terme (5 wkly), Limoges (10 wkly), Lourdes (5 wkly), Marseille (12 wkly), Perpignan (9 wkly), Porto (16 wkly) & Toulouse (2 daily)
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Gate closed at Stansted - and then this Caught on camera happened:
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Ryanair is finalising the last details of interlining with Norwegian and Aer Lingus for their long-haul flights.
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Ryanair Summer 2017 Brussels Charleroi operation changes
Ryanair last fall announced planned service expansion at Brussels South Charleroi in 2017 previously not covered on Airlineroute. Planned service increase sees a number of routes being extended to year-round, on/after 26MAR17.
Extended from seasonal to year-round:
Brussels South Charleroi – Glasgow International 2 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Madrid 2 daily
Brussels South Charleroi – Sofia 4 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Timisoara 3 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Toulouse 1 daily
Following routes receiving additional frequencies in 2017, based on comparison with summer 2016:
Brussels South Charleroi – Bordeaux Increase from 4 to 5 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Bucharest Increase from 7 to 9 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Budapest Increase from 7 to 9 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Warsaw Modlin Increase from 12 to 14 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Venice Treviso Increase from 7 to 10 weekly
Source: Airline Route
Ryanair last fall announced planned service expansion at Brussels South Charleroi in 2017 previously not covered on Airlineroute. Planned service increase sees a number of routes being extended to year-round, on/after 26MAR17.
Extended from seasonal to year-round:
Brussels South Charleroi – Glasgow International 2 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Madrid 2 daily
Brussels South Charleroi – Sofia 4 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Timisoara 3 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Toulouse 1 daily
Following routes receiving additional frequencies in 2017, based on comparison with summer 2016:
Brussels South Charleroi – Bordeaux Increase from 4 to 5 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Bucharest Increase from 7 to 9 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Budapest Increase from 7 to 9 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Warsaw Modlin Increase from 12 to 14 weekly
Brussels South Charleroi – Venice Treviso Increase from 7 to 10 weekly
Source: Airline Route
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
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- Posts: 168
- Joined: 25 Mar 2004, 00:00
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Please tell the whole story and not just the positive news as Ryanair likes to do. The reductions at BRU were also posted on http://www.routesonline.com/news/38/air ... es-in-s17/
Ryanair recently revised planned operational frequencies at Brussels Zaventem for summer 2017 season, effective from 26MAR17. A number of routes will see number of flights offered in S17 being scaled back, based on the comparison of OAG Schedules Analyser listing, week of 15JAN17 vs week of 13NOV16.
Latest changes as follow. Routes marked with * represents this route is being converted to year-round, but previously not covered on Airlineroute, on/after 26MAR17:
Brussels Zaventem – Alicante 6 weekly (Previously planned 7 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Barcelona 3 daily (4 daily)
Brussels Zaventem – Berlin Schoenefeld 17 weekly (21 weekly)
* Brussels Zaventem – Hamburg 7 weekly (12 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Lisbon 13 weekly (14 weekly)
* Brussels Zaventem – Madrid 12 weekly (14 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Malaga 7 weekly (10 weekly)
* Brussels Zaventem – Malta 1 daily (no changes)
* Brussels Zaventem – Milan Malpensa 12 weekly (14 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Porto 7 weekly (9 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Rome Fiumcino 16 weekly (21 weekly)
Add to this the routes with no changes and you have now 161 weekly flights from BRU. Previously there were 193 planned. So reducing the BRU program with 16%.
With reduced flying from FR, VY and EZY it is looking good for the marketshare of SN at BRU.
Ryanair recently revised planned operational frequencies at Brussels Zaventem for summer 2017 season, effective from 26MAR17. A number of routes will see number of flights offered in S17 being scaled back, based on the comparison of OAG Schedules Analyser listing, week of 15JAN17 vs week of 13NOV16.
Latest changes as follow. Routes marked with * represents this route is being converted to year-round, but previously not covered on Airlineroute, on/after 26MAR17:
Brussels Zaventem – Alicante 6 weekly (Previously planned 7 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Barcelona 3 daily (4 daily)
Brussels Zaventem – Berlin Schoenefeld 17 weekly (21 weekly)
* Brussels Zaventem – Hamburg 7 weekly (12 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Lisbon 13 weekly (14 weekly)
* Brussels Zaventem – Madrid 12 weekly (14 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Malaga 7 weekly (10 weekly)
* Brussels Zaventem – Malta 1 daily (no changes)
* Brussels Zaventem – Milan Malpensa 12 weekly (14 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Porto 7 weekly (9 weekly)
Brussels Zaventem – Rome Fiumcino 16 weekly (21 weekly)
Add to this the routes with no changes and you have now 161 weekly flights from BRU. Previously there were 193 planned. So reducing the BRU program with 16%.
With reduced flying from FR, VY and EZY it is looking good for the marketshare of SN at BRU.
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Or it's an early indication that the bubble in BRU is about to burst and the yields are unsustainable in the long term. Especially now that fuel prices are slowly starting to creep up againkoninckske wrote: ↑18 Jan 2017, 13:05
With reduced flying from FR, VY and EZY it is looking good for the marketshare of SN at BRU.
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Maybe, or maybe not, we'll see...
But, as you wrote already, ticket prices probably will creep up as well with the reduced competition...
Cheers,
Stij
Re: Ryanair in 2017
What we see in Belgium in fact is a slow return of Ryanair to its first base CRL, where the low airport taxes enable a sustainable growth. While their Brussels operations are decreasing, their Charleroi operations keep growing steadily (except for the one year when Ryanair started flying from Brussels).
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
Re: Ryanair in 2017
All the specialist are agree that oil prices will not move much the next 3 years...sean1982 wrote: ↑18 Jan 2017, 13:52Or it's an early indication that the bubble in BRU is about to burst and the yields are unsustainable in the long term. Especially now that fuel prices are slowly starting to creep up againkoninckske wrote: ↑18 Jan 2017, 13:05
With reduced flying from FR, VY and EZY it is looking good for the marketshare of SN at BRU.
I also think that there is no bubble in Brussels but a big market around and a beautiful tool with Brussels Airport.
That still has to recover from SABENA and is doing so.
Hasta la victoria siempre.
Re: Ryanair in 2017
If thats the case then why are SN's load factors remaining stable ... even slightly decreasing (at rock bottom prices)?
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Some of those frequency reductions unfortunately don't help make them attractive for business passengers.koninckske wrote: ↑18 Jan 2017, 13:05
Add to this the routes with no changes and you have now 161 weekly flights from BRU. Previously there were 193 planned. So reducing the BRU program with 16%.
The came could be seen in CGN: a big bang start followed by gradual frequency reductions here and there.
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Because they offer more seats and they are growing and don't forget the terrorist attacks...
Hasta la victoria siempre.
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Ryanair will contest Lufthansa / airberlin deal
Ryanair will lodge a formal complaint against Lufthansa’s plans to wet lease 38 aircraft from its German competitor airberlin, arguing that the deal is anti-competitive.
The agreement, which was finalized in December, will see 38 airberlin Airbus A319/A320 aircraft operating for Eurowings and Austrian Airlines for six years from February.
Eurowings will take 33 of the aircraft, enabling it to phase out up to 20 older A320s, and Austrian Airlines will take the remaining five. The deal also includes a codeshare between Lufthansa and airberlin equity parent Etihad Airways.
More from ATWonline: http://atwonline.com/airlines/ryanair-c ... erlin-deal
Ryanair will lodge a formal complaint against Lufthansa’s plans to wet lease 38 aircraft from its German competitor airberlin, arguing that the deal is anti-competitive.
The agreement, which was finalized in December, will see 38 airberlin Airbus A319/A320 aircraft operating for Eurowings and Austrian Airlines for six years from February.
Eurowings will take 33 of the aircraft, enabling it to phase out up to 20 older A320s, and Austrian Airlines will take the remaining five. The deal also includes a codeshare between Lufthansa and airberlin equity parent Etihad Airways.
More from ATWonline: http://atwonline.com/airlines/ryanair-c ... erlin-deal
André
ex Sabena #26567
ex Sabena #26567
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Almost a full plane in fact then, slightly more than I had guessed even, from your initial posting!koninckske wrote: ↑18 Jan 2017, 13:05 ...you'll have 161 weekly flights from BRU. Previously there were 193 planned. So reducing the BRU program with 16%.
From a posting by Sean, it is revealed to be done via a last minute restructuring of their operations to/from BRU, so no plane is physically being pulled out of BRU. This in turn gives away that this huge cut back at BRU is something which is coordinated at the highest group level, and not just the consequence of a local bottleneck at a single base.
It's a clear indication that the Ryanair base at BRU has thus indeed been financially underperforming -despite all the grand talk it was such a great success- and Ryanair's growth at BRU has thus stalled -can we even speak of growth still when they cut back by 16%?-, so the bubble you refer to has indeed burst... and not surprisingly it burst at the weakest airlines.
I've said so before: airlines not rooted at the base they operate from are not the kind of companies which are willing to fund underperforming operations for many years. There are other far more lucrative routes to deploy their limited resources on, which is exactly what we saw them do at BRU too, for next summer: whether they are called vueling, easyjet, or ryanair, they all make their commercial decisions by the same simple business strategy aimed at maximizing the immediate return from any investments made, hence they all pull back and cut the losses as soon as the headwind they face is getting too strong.
Re: Ryanair in 2017
This may seem a bit negative for the LCCs (or slightly optimistic for SN) but the analysis is basically correct. And, true, even during a slowdown in BRU's growth, SN has no other choice but to operate from...BRU and find ways to maximize the use of its growing fleet.Inquirer wrote: ↑21 Jan 2017, 11:26Almost a full plane in fact then, slightly more than I had guessed even, from your initial posting!koninckske wrote: ↑18 Jan 2017, 13:05 ...you'll have 161 weekly flights from BRU. Previously there were 193 planned. So reducing the BRU program with 16%.
From a posting by Sean, it is revealed to be done via a last minute restructuring of their operations to/from BRU, so no plane is physically being pulled out of BRU. This in turn gives away that this huge cut back at BRU is something which is coordinated at the highest group level, and not just the consequence of a local bottleneck at a single base.
It's a clear indication that the Ryanair base at BRU has thus indeed been financially underperforming -despite all the grand talk it was such a great success- and Ryanair's growth at BRU has thus stalled -can we even speak of growth still when they cut back by 16%?-, so the bubble you refer to has indeed burst... and not surprisingly it burst at the weakest airlines.
I've said so before: airlines not rooted at the base they operate from are not the kind of companies which are willing to fund underperforming operations for many years. There are other far more lucrative routes to deploy their limited resources on, which is exactly what we saw them do at BRU too, for next summer: whether they are called vueling, easyjet, or ryanair, they all make their commercial decisions by the same simple business strategy aimed at maximizing the immediate return from any investments made, hence they all pull back and cut the losses as soon as the headwind they face is getting too strong.
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Also, I think that when Brussels Airlines grow, it creates even more demand. When Brussels Airlines open a new route, it allow a passenger to fly from the new destination to Brussels but more important, it feeds the global network of Brussels Airlines and partner.
This is not the case with the low-cost carrier
This is not the case with the low-cost carrier
Re: Ryanair in 2017
Oh no, it hasn't burst yet. Fr has forced SN into a knee jerk unsustainable growth, sacrificing their regional jets and now having to lease in that type of operations at a very high cost. The load factors are not following the strategy of low yield, high LF ... and with SN's low yield customers now being used to current ticket prices any rise in price (eventhough fuel prices are slightly on the rise) will result in a further stagnation or even drop in LF. The battle is far from over, let alone won oh, and to call FR weak ... sorry inquirer ... is laughable