Ryanair to restore just two routes to Bosnia, Serbia


Low cost carrier Ryanair will resume just two routes to both Banja Luka and Niš this summer season as it continues to rebuild its network. The low cost carrier, which celebrated its return to flying with over 1.000 daily flights all across Europe two days ago, will restore operations to the two markets next month. It has already recommenced services to Croatia and Montenegro. The carrier plans to resume flights to Banja Luka from Charleroi Airport and Memmingen on August 1. It’s subsidiary Lauda, which was to commence new operations from Vienna this summer, has pushed back the service launch until the start of the 2020/2021 winter season in late October, when Ryanair is to restore the remainder of its destinations, as well as commence its planned new service from Bergamo to Bosnia and Herzegovina’s second largest city, although changes remain highly likely.

Ryanair will recommence flights to Niš on August 2 with a service from Malta. The airline has also said it would restore operations from Berlin to the south-east Serbian city next month, however, tickets for the route are only available for purchase from late October onwards, indicating flights will not begin as planned in a few weeks. In a statement, the carrier said, “Ryanair is pleased to announce it will restore two routes to/from Nis, commencing from August 2, 2020, as part of our summer 2020 schedule. We look forward to reuniting friends and families and bringing thousands of tourists that will help boost regional economies and protect jobs. Serbs can now look forward to bagging a bargain holiday and enjoying sunshine and the stunning beaches in their favourite summer spot like Malta or discovering Berlin during city break”.

Both Banja Luka Airport and Niš, which have struggled for years to secure flights, have seen a partial resumption of operations following their reopening. Banja Luka Airport is currently served by two weekly services from Belgrade operated by Air Serbia, which will grow to three weekly from next week. Air Serbia will also run summer charters from Banja Luka to Antalya starting this Sunday. On the other hand, Wizz Air has restored its network out of Niš, while Air Serbia has resumed select destinations, including Hahn, Nuremberg, Salzburg and Hanover.

Comments

  1. Anonymous09:04

    Unfortunate. I hope they resume all of their flights eventually.

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  2. Anonymous09:04

    I doubt Malta-Nis will happen next month either.

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  3. Anonymous09:06

    Ryanair has indeed become quite unreliable and unpredictable. Hope they become more serious.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:15

      I would also like to see how they will cope with the pandemic and if they seriously won't think about supplying elementary gear pro bono and adhering to prevention measures like emptying the middle row.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous09:22

      Empty middle row is useless. How would this look on airplanes with 2/2 seating configuration? Only one person on each side of the aisle? So max 50% load factor?

      LCCs can't make money with empty middle seat, as it's probably below their break-even LF.

      Delete
  4. Anonymous09:07

    I wonder what happens in cases like Banja Luka which said they pay some sort of subsidy for Ryanair to fly. Do they not pay now or what do they do?

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:18

      Do we know what is the amount they get in BNX?

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    2. Anonymous09:23

      Any subsidies are probably per departing passenger, so if there are no/less passengers, Ryanair gets no/less money.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous11:53

      Those were nothing but rumours. No proof

      Delete
    4. Anonymous11:58

      The RS government said themselves that subsidies are provided but that they can't reveal the nature of them or amount because it is a business secret.

      Delete
  5. Anonymous09:09

    It makes sense considering both markets are outside of the EU and are still affected by various travel bans.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:14

      Has nothing to do with travel bans, more to do with the slow reintroduction of Ryanair flights. They have resumed flights to Montenegro, which is also subject to many travel bans.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous09:16

      Yes but the passenger structure is completely different. I mean they resumed flights from some Polish city to Podgorica. Obviously these flights are not filled with Montenegrins but with Polish tourists going to Montenegro.

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    3. Anonymous09:21

      * True. And they launched Dublin-Podgorica yesterday.

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  6. Anonymous09:09

    Good news for Wizz from INI.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous10:56

      Were they competing on any routes?

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    2. Anonymous17:45

      No, but this could easily change .
      Wizz makes fast decisions .

      Delete
  7. Anonymous09:10

    Pity :(

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  8. Anonymous09:10

    I wonder if Nis will keep its 3 euro charges for airlines after this pandemic.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:13

      Airports will have to do even more to attract airlines after this crisis.

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    2. Anonymous09:18

      I think they have that 3 euro agreement with Ryanair until next year.

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    3. Anonymous09:57

      Government said they will extend this charge in the future.

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  9. Anonymous09:17

    Very fragile situation.

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  10. Anonymous09:19

    Poor Banja Luka. It finally catches a break and now this.

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  11. Anonymous09:19

    How come VIE-BNX will go ahead in October if they closed down the base in Vienna?

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:26

      They didn't.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous09:26

      They are not closing the base, Ryanair is taking over but they will be leasing the planes and crew from Lauda.

      Delete
    3. Anonymous09:28

      Ah ok I see. My mistake. I would have thought they would have started this route. I realize there are travel warnings and whatnot but I assume there is such a big diaspora which has residency or Austrian citizenship that it would probably do better than for example Dublin-Podgorica which they launched yesterday.

      Delete
  12. Anonymous09:30

    Future for smaller airports certainly looks bleak.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:33

      I think OSI and OMO are in worst position in all of ex-YU because even before corona they struggled to keep airlines flying there.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous09:34

      True. OMO has no flights this summer at all. No charters from Italy and Eurowings is not resuming flights from Germany. It's really a dire situation.

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    3. Anonymous09:40

      It looks bleak for all airports. Big and small.

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    4. Anonymous09:43

      No it does not look bleak for all airport, big and small. Big airports will recover much faster. Look at BEG departures today, it's very busy. On top of all that yesterday Belavia sent the B733, they will do it again tomorrow and then on Monday again. Obviously there is growing demand since they increased capacity from E75. Then we also read about JU boosting its network and the same for QR. So no, bigger airports don't have it bad, small ones on the other hand do.

      Delete
    5. Anonymous09:54

      733? Dude, plz lol.
      How about working on London and not having 70 flights to Oslo?

      Delete
    6. Anonymous10:36

      Plz lol what? Increasing capacity from E75 to B733 is quite a jump.

      Also what's there to be done about London? There are flights to both LHR and LTN, what more do you want?

      As for Oslo, there are 70 flights beacuse there is enough demand.... duuuh

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    7. Anonymous18:55

      MSQ BEG on B733 was full today.

      Delete
  13. Anonymous09:40

    It's interesting the very different approach Wizz Air and Ryanair have. Wizz Air started flights as early as possible while Ryanair has been quite slow.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:44

      I think most LCC flights at the moment are operated at a loss, so Wizz Air is just trying to stimulate capacity by burning cash to expand (new routes). If the demand follows capacity, they'll be rolling in cash. If not...

      Delete
    2. Anonymous09:47

      Yes and then you have some proactive legacies like OU that never stopped flying. Great for their brand though.

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    3. Anonymous09:49

      easyjet has adopted the same policy as Ryanair.

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    4. Anonymous09:56

      "proactive legacies like OU"

      Easy to burn cash like there's no tomorrow if you know somebody will step in and pay your debt/bills.

      Delete
    5. Anonymous20:07

      Easyjet actually is back as usual in August .
      3x weekly Belgrade to Basel and Geneva
      4x weekly Belgrade to Berlin Tegel

      Delete
    6. Anonymous07:57

      Plus they have already resumed GVA-BEG!

      Delete
  14. Anonymous09:46

    At least they will come back, so I would be thankful.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:51

      +1

      Delete
    2. Anonymous10:54

      Yes, at one point no flights from Banja Luka were showing until winter.

      Delete
  15. Anonymous09:49

    The structure of passengers on these flights may change. There will be fewer workers around Europe.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous09:51

      I doubt Nis-Malta depended on temporary gasto workers.

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    2. Anonymous10:13

      Not exclusively but I don't see whose going to fly there in 4 weeks. I think Malta still has quarantine rules.

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    3. Anonymous10:21

      Malta's service sector is full of Balkanians. So, yes the route depends on gasto travellers. Like every other Malta route from the Balkans.

      Delete
    4. Anonymous10:27

      True. People should remember that INI is also used by people from other countries.

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    5. Anonymous11:26

      lol sure the other countries have no flights to Malta. HIllarious

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    6. Anonymous11:31

      Sure they do. But certain cities and areas gravitate towards different airports because they are closer.

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    7. Anonymous11:53

      dream on

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    8. Anonymous11:57

      I don't have to dream on. The airport reveled the percentage of passengers coming from neighboring countries.

      Delete
    9. Anonymous12:06

      @11.31 you better look on the map and check the positions of SOF (60km to the border) and SKP (even less) and then try to find out "cities and areas" the gravitate to your desired airport

      Delete
    10. Anonymous12:10

      @11.57 the airport also revealed that without BUD the LF in August was "close to 70%" which after we discovered the german numbers concluded that it was nothing but an audacious lie

      Delete
    11. Anonymous12:24

      Yet INI marches on, from strength to strength no matter what some on here say or what their rotten and envious hearts desire.

      Delete
  16. Anonymous10:54

    I find it interesting that out of all of the routes from Nis they plan to resume Malta.

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  17. Any news about txl-bnx?
    Will the route also come back?

    ReplyDelete
  18. Anonymous15:18

    Ryan offers Berlin in this situation as a city break destination for customers from Nis. What?? Is Ryan going cuckoo?

    ReplyDelete
  19. Anonymous17:38

    This is Wizz Airs golden opportunity !
    They should kickstart the same routes as Ryanair but much earlier and squeeze Ryanair out of both markets .

    ReplyDelete

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