Yorkshire Post

EasyJet heading for the beach with largest number of flights

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BUDGET AIRLINE EasyJet will operate its largest number of flights between the UK and beach destinatio­ns this summer as coronaviru­s restrictio­ns ease.

With sales “performing very well”, the low-cost airline’s capacity compared with 2019 levels will be more than doubled on routes to Turkey and up 36 per cent for Greece, according to chief executive Johan Lundgren.

An overall 14 per cent rise in capacity on routes between the UK and beach locations make those operations “the biggest ever” in easyJet’s 26-year history, he added.

EasyJet said the Omicron variant saw its load factor, a measure of how well it fills planes, slump to 67 per cent in December after recovering past 80 per cent in

October and November. Despite that, the company almost halved headline pre-tax losses in its first quarter to the end of December to £213m, down from losses of £423m a year earlier.

The carrier said it has seen a “step change” in bookings since the January 5 announceme­nt that pre-departure Covid testing would be scrapped for fully vaccinated arrivals entering England. Demand was buoyed further by last week’s news of restrictio­nfree travel from February 11.

Mr Lundgren said the UK is “leading on bookings versus Europe for the first time since spring 2020”.

It is “traditiona­l beach and leisure destinatio­ns that are recovering the quickest”, he said.

EasyJet said that, while Omicron

is expected to continue to have a short-term impact on its performanc­e in the quarter to the end of March, its flight programme will “ramp up” from just 50 per cent of 2019 levels in January to near pre-pandemic levels between July and September.

Mr Lundgren said: “EasyJet produced a significan­t year-onyear improvemen­t in the first quarter, despite the short-term impact of Omicron in December.”

He added: “Booking volumes jumped in the UK following the welcome reduction of travel restrictio­ns announced on January 5, which have been sustained and then given a further boost from the UK Government’s decision earlier this week to remove all testing requiremen­ts.”

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