Bristol Post

EasyJet Summer flight bookings rocket as easing of restrictio­ns sparks strong recovery

- Neil LANCEFIELD Press Associatio­n

SUMMER flight bookings are exceeding pre-pandemic levels, easyJet has announced.

The airline, Bristol Airport’s biggest operator, said more bookings were made during the past six weeks than in the same period in 2019.

Passengers are booking flights closer to departure than before the virus crisis.

EasyJet said the UK’s removal of its coronaviru­s travel restrictio­ns on January 24 sparked a “strong and sustained recovery”, resulting in the proportion of bookings between the UK and the European Union being “broadly equal”.

This is compared with a 70:30 split in favour of the EU last year, when the UK imposed stricter conditions on travellers.

The low-cost carrier operated at 80 per cent of 2019 capacity in the first three months of 2022.

It expects to make a loss before tax in the range of £535 million to £565 million for the six months to the end of March.

This is a reduction in its losses compared with the same period 12 months earlier, which is “ahead of market expectatio­ns”, according to easyJet.

It attributed this to improved trading and “self-help” measures, such as optimising its network, strong sales of ancillary products and a “continued cost focus”.

Commenting on the airline’s record during the first three months of 2022, chief executive Johan Lundgren said: “EasyJet’s performanc­e in the second quarter has been driven by improved trading following the UK Government’s decision to relax testing restrictio­ns with an extra boost from self-help measures which saw us outperform market expectatio­ns.

“Since travel restrictio­ns were removed, easyJet has seen a strong recovery in trading, which has been sustained, resulting in a positive outlook for Easter and beyond, with daily booking volumes for summer currently tracking ahead of those at the same time in FY19.

“We remain confident in our plans, which will see us reaching near 2019 flying levels for this summer and emerge as one of the winners in the recovery.”

EasyJet said it has flown 94 per cent of its planned schedule in the past seven days, with around 1,500 daily flights.

This is despite “the recent increase in the number of crew testing positive for Covid-19, together with normal operationa­l disruption such as weather and

ATC (air traffic control) delays”, the airline explained.

“We have proactivel­y managed this in advance by making preemptive cancellati­ons as early as possible, enabling the majority of our customers to rebook onto flights departing the same day.”

EasyJet cancelled at least 23 flights to or from Gatwick, affecting routes between the West Sussex airport and locations such as Berlin, Milan, Valencia and Venice.

The airline said cancellati­ons were being made “in advance to give customers the ability to rebook on to alternativ­e flights”.

However, delays in processing security checks for new airline crew have been increasing the number of flights being cancelled, according to Mr Lundgren.

He said the airline was waiting for the Department for Transport to give permission for around 100 new members of staff to start work.

“There’s this delay of the clearance from the DfT for people to get their IDs,” he added.

“There’s a backlog there and we’re waiting currently for about 100 cabin crew to get their IDs.

“There’s a three-week delay on that. That has had an impact. If that would have been on time, we would have seen less cancellati­ons.”

This demonstrat­es that the rise in coronaviru­s infections has “impacted basically the whole of the UK”, Mr Lundgren said.

He went on: “I understand the DfT and the ministers are doing what they can to accelerate and speed this up – which we find very constructi­ve – but it definitely has had an impact.”

Mr Lundgren insisted “we don’t have a shortage of crew” and it was “absolutely not” fair to accuse the airline of selling flights it could not fulfil.

“We were having in some cases up to 20 per cent of absence, and you wouldn’t expect any airline at any point in time to be able to cover that,” he said.

“That is unfortunat­e for people who have been affected but I would like to reiterate that those cancellati­ons were made pre-emptively.

“People got notice on that in the beginning of last week. The majority of them had the opportunit­y to rebook to flights that we have on the same day, however unfortunat­e that is.

“We’re carrying up to 260,000 customers per day, so I think it’s important to put that into context.”

We remain confident in our plans, which will see us reaching near 2019 flying levels for this summer Johan Lundgren

 ?? ?? An Airbus A320 on the runway at Bristol Airport
An Airbus A320 on the runway at Bristol Airport

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