OREANDA-NEWS.  Ryanair, Ireland’s favourite airline, today (16Oct) announced plans to grow its traffic at its Irish airports by at least 1m passengers p.a. from April 2014 in a direct response to the Govt’s announcement in yesterday’s budget that the €3 travel tax (which applies only to air passengers) will be scrapped in April 2014.
 
Ryanair highlighted that since the travel tax was introduced in January 2009, traffic at the main Irish airports had declined from 30.5m passengers in 2008 to 23.5m in 2012. Ryanair believes that much of this traffic can now be recovered thanks to the abolition of the travel tax, which makes Ireland a more competitive and attractive destination for inbound visitors, particularly those on short flights from the UK and Continental Europe.
 
Ryanair will now respond positively to the Govt’s initiative and announce plans to grow traffic to/from its Irish airports by at least 1m passengers p.a. from April 2014. Ryanair has invited all the main Irish airports – Dublin, Cork, Shannon, Knock and Kerry – to meetings in Dublin on Thursday and Friday of this week to finalise these growth plans and how it can be split between the airports. These 1m new passengers (up to 500,000 visitors) will deliver more visitors than The Gathering in 2013 and will lead to the creation of at least 1,000 new jobs at these Irish airports where research by the Airport Council International (ACI) demonstrates that 1,000 new jobs are created at international airports for every 1m additional passengers delivered.
 
Ryanair expects that this traffic growth will be focused on a range of new routes and additional frequencies on existing routes, although the list of routes and frequencies and the share of traffic growth will be finalised in talks with the Irish airports over the coming days.