
The boss of Ryanair has instructed stated that as many as one in ten of its flights could possibly be cancelled if the war in Iran continues, as ITV News Economics Editor Joel Hills experiences
Ryanair could have to cancel 10% of its flights this summer season, its CEO has warned, if the Iran war continued to impact jet fuel costs.
“We’re all facing an unknown scenario,” Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary instructed ITV News on Thursday.
“And we are certainly looking at maybe having to cancel 5%, 10% of flights through May, June and July.”Speaking to ITV News Economics Editor Joel Hills, O’Leary urged folks to guide flights for the summer season as shortly as they will, to keep away from rising airfares.
If anybody does have their flight cancelled, O’Leary stated they need to blame Trump slightly than the airline.
“This has been a poorly judged attack on Iran, there doesn’t seem to be any exit plan at all,” he stated.
Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary talking to ITV News’ Joel Hills
His feedback got here as regional airline Skybus introduced its flights between Cornwall Airport Newquay and London Gatwick could be abruptly cancelled ranging from April 2, attributable to “circumstances beyond our control”.
Customers anticipating to journey in April and May are being contacted by the airline, and can obtain a full refund, the airline stated.
Managing director Jonathan Hinkles blamed the “huge rise in the cost of fuel following the war in the Gulf” as properly as a drop in passenger bookings.
“At a time of great economic uncertainty and steps being taken to conserve energy worldwide, it is neither environmentally nor economically sound for us to continue flying with vastly reduced passenger numbers,” Hinkles stated.
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Guernsey airline Aurigny said last week it will be decreasing flights between the island and London City airport between mid-April and early June, as properly as combining providers to and from South-West England between Exeter and Bristol.
Most of the airline’s Wednesday flights to and from Paris, in France, have additionally been put again till June, it stated.
The airline can be including a brief fuel adjustment surcharge of £2 on all bookings constituted of March 20 onwards.
“With no immediate end to the regional conflict in the Middle East in sight, aviation fuel prices have also increased considerably and show continued extreme daily fluctuations,” a spokesperson for Aurigny stated.
Customers affected by the adjustments are being contacted instantly by the airline.
“While a small island community, we are not immune to the realities presented by the global travel ecosystem,” Philip Saunders, Aurigny’s chief industrial officer stated.
“Current global events are impacting consumer confidence and changing travel behaviours. Furthermore, significant increases in global oil prices are now filtering through to aviation.
“Unfortunately, we’ve to move on some of the ensuing prices to prospects to make sure sustainable air providers to and from Guernsey.”
Saunders said the airline hoped to welcome back UK holidaymakers from July onwards.
No British airlines have cancelled flights as of yet. British Airways told ITV News: “UK airways are presently not seeing disruption to jet fuel provide and proceed to have interaction with fuel suppliers and authorities to observe the state of affairs.”
The Iran war has had a global impact on fuel and energy prices as the Strait of Hormuz – a major waterway, through which a fifth of the world’s oil travels – remains largely shut.
The price of Brent crude oil, the world’s benchmark, has soared to higher than $100 a barrel during the war for the first time since 2022.
Multiple other countries have already seen flight cancellations due to the war, with Air New Zealand announcing on March 12 it was axing 1,100 flights until early May over jet fuel prices.
Vietnamese airlines have cut flights on domestic and international routes, and some regional routes across Australia are not being flown.
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