The folks at the Daily
Mail are
getting mildly worked up about the activities of the bean counters at
Ryanair, the Millwall of air carriers (everybody hates us and we don’t care),
although the story is not a new one. Michael O’Leary’s merry men, who love to
hammer home the idea that they have “low
cost” in their DNA, may this time have overstepped the mark in their
efforts to save money.
O'Leary gives the authorities a traditional Ryanair greeting
Why so? Well, this time it’s about fuel, without which the
fleet of admittedly recent model Boeing 737-800s would not remain airborne for
very long. Carriers are required to fuel their aircraft with sufficient for the
sector to be flown, plus a reserve amount, plus a contingency amount, and this
is for good reason: headwinds, holding patterns, diversions and course changes
can all impact on the amount carried.
The thought that Ryanair may be adopting an “only just enough” approach to fuelling
their planes entered following a number of incidents in Spain, where three
flights landed at Valencia
on 26 July having declared
fuel emergencies (after being put in a holding pattern). All had diverted
from Madrid’s Barajas airport due to adverse weather conditions. One had less
than the minimum fuel reserve in its tanks.
That three aircraft were affected on the same evening (the
flights landed within a period of just 16 minutes) may not have set the media
hares running – although the BBC reported it
three weeks later – but Irish
and Spanish authorities have now decided to investigate further. The
carrier’s spokesman, the perennially unsubtle Stephen McNamara, was bullish,
but the rumours do not bode well.
The Irish Airline Pilots’ Union IALPA has claimed that
Ryanair pressures its pilots to carry the minimum amount of fuel required under
whatever jurisdiction is in force. An official of the Spanish pilots’ union has
asserted “The executives send
instructions to the crew, emphasising that for every x kilos of fuel they pump
in the airline loses x amount of money”, which more or less backs up the
IALPA claim.
So is there any cause for punters to worry? Well, there will
always be a number of incidents affecting carriers, and with Ryanair now being
the largest carrier in Spain by passenger volume, they are likely to encounter
more than other airlines. But to have to declare three fuel emergencies in less
than twenty minutes, and for one of the planes to be dangerously low on fuel on
landing, is eyebrow raising.
Ryanair have long been rumoured to give Air Traffic Control
the verbals to get easier and faster approaches to landing. The incident
at Gothenburg last May when one of their cabin crew was hospitalised with
head injuries after falling from the aircraft during a panicked departure shows
the pressure crews are under not to drop their slots. There is only one
direction in which this kind of culture leads.
And no responsible air carrier should want to go there.
Ever. At all.
Rumour has it that O'Leary is now using EasyJet for his cheap holiday travel to mitigate the risk of travelling in an aeroplane that could fall out of the sky when it runs out of fuel.
ReplyDeleteActually, I made that up but it'd make a good headline :)