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Ryanair coming to a City near you!

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HighSpeedClimb

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2006
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Ryanair

Ryanair planning low-cost transatlantic airline

Ryanair is planning to launch a new low-fare transatlantic airline that could allow passengers to fly to the US for as little as €10 (£7). Speaking to Flight International magazine, the airline's chief executive, Michael O'Leary, said that the recently-brokered Open Skies agreement between the EU and the US would allow for a new no-frills service.
Within the next three or four years, Ryanair plans to launch a new airline that would act independently and make use of a fleet of up to 50 Airbus A350s or Boeing 787s to locations in North America.

Following the low-cost model, the new carrier would allow for extremely cheap tickets by flying to secondary airports such as Baltimore and New York Long Island Islip Macarthur, and selling in-flight extras such as food, drink, duty-free items and entertainment.
"By mid-2009, we will be carrying 70 million passengers at 23 bases across Europe," O'Leary said. "It will be relatively straightforward for us to do a deal for 40 to 50 long-haul aircraft and connect these bases transatlantically. There would be no-one to touch us."
The flights would also include a premium service for passengers wanting a little more luxury.
Low-cost long-haul services are likely to become more commonplace in the next few years. Last year Oasis Hong Kong Airlines made headlines after offering flights to the Far East for as little as £75 one-way, and the Open Skies deal has thrown the transatlantic market open to more competition - meaning cheaper tickets.
 
I don't like this at all. Many of the US major airlines are now focusing much of their service on foreign markets because of the lack of competition from LCC's.

Here they come!
 
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We as Americans are snobs. It will take a few of the tourist passengers away, but the majority will want the perks and better service on a flight that long.
 
Ryanair

Ryanair planning low-cost transatlantic airline

Ryanair is planning to launch a new low-fare transatlantic airline that could allow passengers to fly to the US for as little as €10 (£7). Speaking to Flight International magazine, the airline's chief executive, Michael O'Leary, said that the recently-brokered Open Skies agreement between the EU and the US would allow for a new no-frills service.
Within the next three or four years, Ryanair plans to launch a new airline that would act independently and make use of a fleet of up to 50 Airbus A350s or Boeing 787s to locations in North America.

Following the low-cost model, the new carrier would allow for extremely cheap tickets by flying to secondary airports such as Baltimore and New York Long Island Islip Macarthur, and selling in-flight extras such as food, drink, duty-free items and entertainment.
"By mid-2009, we will be carrying 70 million passengers at 23 bases across Europe," O'Leary said. "It will be relatively straightforward for us to do a deal for 40 to 50 long-haul aircraft and connect these bases transatlantically. There would be no-one to touch us."
The flights would also include a premium service for passengers wanting a little more luxury.
Low-cost long-haul services are likely to become more commonplace in the next few years. Last year Oasis Hong Kong Airlines made headlines after offering flights to the Far East for as little as £75 one-way, and the Open Skies deal has thrown the transatlantic market open to more competition - meaning cheaper tickets.


Ummmm, where are they going to get these airplanes and how soon will they arrive? A350s are at least 5-7 years out. There is a huge backlog for 787s and, as far as I know, Ryanair hasn't ordered any yet. Sure, a leasing company could provide a few, but other airlines have already likely tapped those leasing companies (I am sure Delta has been knocking on their doors already). I suppose Ryanair could initially use some beat-up A330s or junky 767-200s (if there are any left after Maxjet and ABEX have purchased the remaining copies) for their passengers willing to fly 8-10 hours with no leg room and a selection of biscuit crums and blood pie for supper...

You can't argue wtih Ryanair's success - it will be interesting to watch but I doubt we will see any 787s or A350s in their colors any time soon...
 
We as Americans are snobs. It will take a few of the tourist passengers away, but the majority will want the perks and better service on a flight that long.

Im not being a jerk here, however was there a point in history when the same was said about domestic air travel?
 
Im not being a jerk here, however was there a point in history when the same was said about domestic air travel?

Yeah but the SWA crowd just wants to hop over to Des Moines cuz cousin bubba's cookin up a hot batch of meth.

The LGA-CDG crowd is a tad more sophisticated. I hope.
 
Yeah but the SWA crowd just wants to hop over to Des Moines cuz cousin bubba's cookin up a hot batch of meth.

The LGA-CDG crowd is a tad more sophisticated. I hope.

Intersting comparison. So who uses Bubba's meth? The LGA crowd?
 
Many of the airports they probably want to fly to are out of the way and probably don't have proper customs facilities. It will take years for this to happen.


Bye Bye--General Lee
 

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