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Thursday 02 September 2021 11:44 am  |  Updated:  Thursday 04 November 2021 4:35 pm

Ryanair beats August passenger number forecasts as holidaymakers escape to the sun

By: Edward Thicknesse

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“I don’t want to preempt the statement of my honourable friend the transport secretary but I believe when he does make that statement… [Merriman] will be pleased”. –– ADVERTISEMENT –– Later this afternoon Prime Minister Boris Johnson confirmed that the government would set out steps to make testing “less onerous” soon. “We will be saying a lot more shortly about the traffic light system, about simplifying it and about what we can do to make the burdens of testing less onerous for those who are coming back into the country,” he told a press conference.

Budget carrier Ryanair beat its passenger number targets for August as holidaymakers took advantage of looser travel restrictions to seek the European sunshine.

The Irish airline flew 11.1m passengers last month, more than the 10.5m it had previously predicted, and double the number it carried in June.

On Tuesday chief executive Michael O’Leary said that the carrier was on track to fly 100m passengers this year, with monthly numbers expected to hit 10.5m for each of the next three months.

In 2019, Ryanair flew a record 149m passengers, before the pandemic grounded planes and all but shut down air travel.

This morning Wizz Air also revealed that passenger numbers had jumped 50 per cent in August in another sign that travel is beginning to take off.

The UK’s stringent travel restrictions were eased at the end of July to allow double vaccinated people to travel to most European destinations and return without needing to quarantine.

The 7-day average number of UK daily flights in the week ending 29 Aug was 3,405, according to @eurocontrol ✈️

This is the highest weekly average number of UK flights since Saturday 21 March 2020 (just before the first UK national lockdown) https://t.co/MEVhUl6o9C

— Office for National Statistics (ONS) (@ONS) September 2, 2021

Although this helped encourage people back onto flights, O’Leary said that the government should scrap all travel restrictions for fully vaccinated people, including testing requirements.

He also said that the UK should join the EU’s digital Covid “vaccine passport” in order to encourage more European passengers to visit the country over the winter period.

“Americans and Asians are not going to come to the UK this winter, so we need to encourage Europeans to do so instead.

“We have to make it easier [for them to come]. Pissing about with all these PCR tests… is nonsensical.”

Next summer Ryanair will take delivery of 60 new Boeing 737 aircraft, which O’Leary said would help the carrier snap up the spare capacity left behind by failed carriers like Flybe.

By 2025, the carrier is targeting flying 200m passengers a year. 

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