"We
are interested in opening a training centre in Iberia. It would be very good
for us to have a training centre [on the Iberian Peninsula], but we are talking
about Porto, not Lisbon," Michael O’Leary revealed at a meeting with
journalists at Ryanair's premises in Dublin.
He admitted
that Porto was on the table as the airline has a significant operation at
Francisco Sá Carneiro Airport. The location however has not yet been decided,
but the decision should be announced this year.
Asked
whether opening a training centre in Portugal would be a way of putting
pressure on TAP and the Government to free up airport slots, Michael O'Leary
rejected the idea.
"It
would make no difference to the Portuguese Government or TAP. The Portuguese
government is realising that in the near future it will be forced to sell TAP,
perhaps to Iberia," said the head of the Irish carrier, who has repeatedly
criticised state aid given to the Portuguese airline.
Regarding
the 18 'slots' that TAP had to give up at Lisbon airport - an obligation
imposed by the European Commission, as part of the restructuring plan that is
underway - and which have passed to easyJet, Ryanair's low-cost competitor,
O'Leary said that "Tap does not mind competing with easyJet because both
charge high fares."
"We
are not going to grow in Lisbon in the next two noes because there are no 'slots',"
he added.
Michael
O’Leary also criticised the argument that Lisbon airport is operating at its
maximum capacity, with around 20 million passengers handled per year,
characterising it as a "joke".
However,
"if that's the case," he said, "open [the airport of]
Montijo." "With Montijo open, Lisbon would grow to 30 million
passengers in five years," he argued.
For the
current year, Ryanair forecasts point to 165 million passengers carried, which
represents a 15 percent increase from the period prior to the pandemic.
Michael
O'Leary referred to a "very strong recovery this summer", justifying
it with the decision not to lay off workers during the pandemic, having instead
negotiated with the unions pay cuts until 2024, which, he explained, left the
Irish company prepared for the upturn, unlike other airlines that made
redundancies.
Asked about
inflation and the loss of consumer purchasing power, the official said he
believes Ryanair will absorb passengers from other airlines because of its
lower prices. "Until the cost of living and energy prices stabilise, I
think people will be nervous, but I believe there will be a transfer of
passengers from other airlines to Ryanair," he said, stressing that
"passengers will always have money to travel" on his company.