NEWS FLASH
Brussels Airlines has recorded increased demand for travel within Europe this summer and is therefore adding approximately 170 flights to several European destinations. Among them are Ljubljana and Zadar.
Services to Ljubljana will increase from the initially planned seven weekly flights to ten weekly during July and August. The additional departures will be added on Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays. In Zadar, Brussels Airlines will introduce an extra weekly flight compared to its original plan for a total of two weekly during July and August. The new rotation will be operated on Wednesdays.
Jan Derycke, Head of Commercial Offer Management at Brussels Airlines, said, “As demand for travel across Europe continues to grow, we are pleased to increase our capacity this summer, offering customers more choice, greater flexibility, and convenient connections to some of the region’s most popular destinations”,
In a statement, Brussels Airlines also noted, “The geopolitical environment remains highly volatile, which can have an impact on both prices and demand. At present, however, demand for travel remains high. Nevertheless, Lufthansa Group - of which Brussels Airlines is a part of - is currently developing and evaluating scenarios to enable a rapid response to changes in the market environment”.

A bold decision to increase flights in these times. The service must have been performing really well, congrats Ljubljana and Zadar!
ReplyDeleteFlights from where to LJubljana and Zadar?
DeleteUlan Baatar
DeleteMaybe transfers from Africa that formerly used flydubai are now flying via Brussels
DeleteSo Brussels flies from Brussels only?
DeleteWhat happened with the results of the Slovenian subsidy tender ?
ReplyDeleteWeren't they scheduled to be revealed last week already ?
You can’t expect Slovene government to be on time.
DeleteWell, maybe it would be better to read something rather than just commenting. In order to save energy, the Climate Council of the Government of the Republic of Slovenia proposes, among other things, additional subsidies for small and affordable electric vehicles, the temporary introduction of free public transport, speed limits on motorways and the introduction of priority lanes for vehicles with multiple passengers. They also propose the abolition of subsidies to increase air connectivity and the limitation of business flights in the public sector.
DeleteTo me at LJU, this looks like a coordinated adjustment of the timetable of the LH group, which was already announced last year. This is about the same added SN capacity as the reduction by LX due to lack of pilots.
ReplyDelete