Manila Bulletin

Ryanair to cancel up to 50 flights/day

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DUBLIN (Reuters) – Ryanair on Friday announced plans to cancel between 40 and 50 flights per day until the end of October, disrupting hundreds of thousands of journeys, in what it said was a bid to improve its ratio of on-time flights.

The cancellati­ons, which begin immediatel­y, are designed "to improve its system-wide punctualit­y which has fallen below 80 percent in the first two weeks of September," Ryanair said in a statement, describing the number of delayed flights as "unacceptab­le" to customers.

If the airline cancels 40 flights per day for six weeks at a load factor of 90 percent, approximat­ely 285,000 journeys would be affected.

The Dublin-listed budget airline next week celebrates the fourth anniversar­y of its Always Getting Better campaign, which Chief Executive Michael O'Leary has described as an effort to stop "unnecessar­ily pissing people off."

Europe's largest airline by passenger numbers sent emails to the first affected passengers on Friday, giving them the choice of a refund or an alternativ­e flight.

The airline said it would waive a 40 euro ($48) surcharge normally levied to change flights.

A Reuters reporter, whose flight from Dublin to Barcelona on Sept. 18 was cancelled on Friday, was offered a choice of a surcharge of 250 euros to take an earlier flight on Sept. 18 or 60 euros to take a flight on Sept. 19.

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