With soaring energy prices, which accelerated with the war in Ukraine, the era of plane tickets sold off at 10 euros or less is over, warns the boss of the low-cost airline Ryanair , Michael O’Leary.
‘I think there will be no more ten euro notes because oil prices are much higher since the invasion of Ukraine by Russia. Our promotions really cheap (…), I think we are not going to see these prices for a number of years, ‘he said on BBC Radio 4 on Thursday.
Low-cost airlines such as Ireland’s Ryanair or its British rival Easyjet have shaken up air transport over the past twenty years and slashed prices, participating in a jump in short trips, in particular urban weekend getaways. end.
And according to Mr O’Leary, average ticket fares on Ryanair are expected to rise by around €10, to around €50 each way over the next five years.
Which, given the ‘low cost’ fare structure with numerous supplements, especially for luggage, might quickly increase the total cost of a round trip to several hundred euros or pounds and undermine demand.
The surge in oil prices over the past year (+36% for Brent listed in London) weighs particularly heavily on the costs of low-cost companies compared to traditional carriers, but it also weighs on household budgets.
Annual energy bills will increase by several thousand pounds on average per household in the coming months in the United Kingdom, where inflation might exceed 13% by October, according to the Bank of England.
Michael O’Leary, however, wants to believe that the demand for air travel will continue and that in the face of consumer budget constraints, low-cost carriers will do well.
He also protested Thursday once morest Brexit which has greatly reduced access for European workers to the United Kingdom, where they previously held hundreds of thousands of jobs.
‘The labor market is very tight, particularly for low-skilled jobs in the hotel and catering industry, distribution and agriculture, and also for security and baggage handlers at airports’, underlines the leader.
‘And if there was any honesty from the government (of departing Prime Minister Boris) Johnson they would admit that Brexit has been a disaster for the free movement of workers and that one of the main difficulties that facing the British economy right now is the lack of workers’.
/ATS