Ryanair Holdings PLC ADR (RYAAY) News
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RYAAY News Highlights
- For RYAAY, its 30 day story count is now at 21.
- Over the past 20 days, the trend for RYAAY's stories per day has been choppy and unclear. It has oscillated between 1 and 4.
- The most mentioned tickers in articles about RYAAY are HA, ING and JOBY.
Latest RYAAY News From Around the Web
Below are the latest news stories about RYANAIR HOLDINGS PLC that investors may wish to consider to help them evaluate RYAAY as an investment opportunity.
‘Second worst short-haul airline’ in Europe refuses to refund family $200 because they claim fliers ‘unchecked’ themselves before boardingEurope's largest low-cost airline Ryanair said the family "unchecked" themselves before the flight, causing their boarding passes to be invalid. |
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Factbox-Greenwashing cases against airlines in Europe, USAirlines around the world are facing scrutiny from advertising and consumer agencies, regulators, and courts over allegedly making misleading claims about their sustainability efforts, sometimes dubbed "greenwashing". Ryanair, Lufthansa and Etihad have all faced criticism from Britain's advertising watchdog for either alleged instances of oversimplifying or providing misleading environmental claims. Whether it was Ryanair calling itself Europe's "lowest emission airline" or Lufthansa saying it was "protecting the future" or Etihad referring to "sustainable aviation", the airlines were told to avoid wording that could imply their activities were good for the environment. |
UPDATE 2-Ryanair's O'Leary takes aim at Italian price capItaly's price cap on flights to Sicily and Sardinia is "illegal and unenforceable", Ryanair group CEO Michael O'Leary told Reuters on Tuesday, adding the budget airline had lodged a complaint with the European Commission. Speaking in Rome, O'Leary said Ryanair could respond by reducing domestic flights to Sicily by as much as 15-20% this winter, shifting its focus instead to international routes to the southern Italian holiday island. |
Ryanair's O'Leary says Italian price decree "illegal and unenforceable"Ryanair group CEO Michael O'Leary said an Italian government decree to cap the price of flights to Sicily and Sardinia was "illegal and unenforceable" and confirmed the budget airline had lodged a complaint with the European Commission. Speaking to Reuters in Rome, O'Leary said Ryanair could reduce domestic flights to Sicily by as much as 15-20% this winter, switching the focus instead to international flights to the southern Italian island. Last month, the government banned airlines from raising fares to Sicily and Sardinia beyond a level "200% higher" than the average price for flights to the two islands, a move aimed at stemming price increases over the peak summer holidays. |
JOBY's Unit Completes Liquid H2-Powered Piloted FlightsJOBY expects the usage of liquid hydrogen to double the range of HY4 demonstrator. |
‘Be very afraid’: what I learned from a 26-hour Ryanair delayThe Guardian’s former money editor endured two days of misery after he and others were bumped off an overbooked flight |
Airline Stock Roundup: United Airlines, Alaska Air & Southwest's Q3 Fuel Cost Warning, Hawaiian Holdings' Dull ViewIn the past week, management of airline heavyweights increased their respective projections for third-quarter 2023 fuel price per gallon. Hawaiian Holdings, meanwhile, revised its projections downward for key metrics. |
Climate activists greet Ryanair CEO with a pie in the face, but he rips them for using artificial cream: ‘I invite passengers to come to Ireland where the cream is better!’The aviation sector has pledged to reach net-zero emissions by 2050, but activists want change now, and they’re not above a vaudevillian prank. |
Watch: CEO of a major airline gets pied in the face by protestersWhile low-cost carriers have allowed many to see places that they would have otherwise not had a chance to see by flying them there cheaply, increased scrutiny is being drawn to their environmental impact. A recent report shows that budget airlines nearly quadrupled their carbon dioxide emissions from 1990 to 2020, while last July Greenpeace called them out for "exploit[ing] every loophole and trick in the book" to offer travelers the "€10 airline ticket" that demotivates from choosing trains and other more sustainable travel options. The environmental side of the low-cost carrier recently came front and center during Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary's visit to the European Commission Headquarters in Brussels. |