By August Graham, PA City Reporter
Passengers will be asked to wear face masks on Ryanair flights potentially until 2022, the airline’s boss has said, as he announced a return to a more normal summer schedule.
The budget airline plans to run around 2,300 flights every day during the summer this year, Michael O’Leary said.
The schedule will mean that Ryanair is running at about 80% of its usual capacity, with people desperate to get back to European beaches, according to the chief executive.
However, beachgoers will need to remember to pack their face masks alongside their swimwear.
“I would imagine at this point in time, we’re planning to continue to require mandatory face mask wearing on board our aircraft through the remainder of this summer schedule and next winter’s schedule,” Mr O’Leary said.
He said this could continue until the spring of next year, unless there are new guidelines from European authorities.
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As vaccination programmes continue throughout Europe, travel restrictions are set to relax in time for Summer. Book before 30 June and if your plans change so can your booking! ☀️🏝️https://t.co/FJLFLHMh0v
— Ryanair Press Office (@RyanairPress) March 16, 2021
Mr O’Leary is keen to get his planes back in the air, so Ryanair can start making money and selling tickets again.
The company has taken a massive hit over the last year, carrying only around 33 million passengers in the year to February, compared to 154 million in the same period a year earlier.
Airlines are now hoping that vaccination efforts can allow a return to fairly normal holiday plans this summer, with European destinations primarily back on the cards.
“Families will be travelling to and from the UK, to and from Europe, going to the beaches of Europe on summer holidays that are richly deserved after the very fraught last 12 months,” Mr O’Leary said.
“I’m pleased to report that we’ve had a recent surge in bookings, as the UK began to open up restrictions also, two weeks ago when Germany eased their restrictions on travel … we’ve seen a significant surge in bookings,” he said.
Mr O’Leary added that the airline could survive another lost summer of travel – however, he saw little reason for this to happen.
He said: “If you’re fully vaccinated, frankly, I would be very surprised if there was any legal basis for the UK government preventing people travelling on holidays to other European countries, which will have caught up with the UK vaccine rollout programme by the end of May or the end of June.”