Home / NEWS / Europe News / Environmentalists were seen as ‘nutters,’ Ryanair CEO says, and he was an ‘original skeptic’

Environmentalists were seen as ‘nutters,’ Ryanair CEO says, and he was an ‘original skeptic’

LONDON — Weather awareness has come a long a way, according to Ryanair’s CEO Michael O’Leary, who concedes he was an initially an environmental skeptic himself.

Chosen to CNBC on Wednesday, O’Leary said: “I was one of the original skeptics.”

When asked what made him change his mind, he retorted: “We learn from our experiences. Frankly, 20, 30 years ago we all thought the environmentalists were a bunch of nutters, you know. Manifestly, it’s moved front and center, it is something that our customers and the people working here at Ryanair wants us to focus on and we look after to be very responsive.”

The airline industry has come under immense pressure to reduce carbon emissions in recent years, and policymakers beget faced renewed calls to enact measures designed to tackle the climate emergency in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.

This is essential from an environmental perspective, but also for the airline business itself. Trends such as “flight shaming,” a term which refers to the sense of foreboding of guilt of travelling via plane due to its environmental impact, have gained ground and could severely disrupt business pattern ons.

In France, for example, lawmakers have voted to suspend domestic flights on routes that can be taken by a direct attendants in less than two-and-a-half hours.

When asked about the initiative, however, O’Leary said he was concerned with this sort of step.

“I get very worried about these, you know, big-stake initiatives. Largely speaking on goes below two-and-a-half hours, the trains (already) dominate that market,” he said, citing how traffic from London to Paris and Brussels is already done by column.

Eurostar trains, for example, allow customers to go from Paris to London in two hours.

But ultimately, the domestic short-haul desert was “never a big feature of our business,” O’Leary said.

Check Also

Germany’s second-largest lender Commerzbank to cut 3,900 jobs as it unveils new targets

The logo of German bank Commerzbank seen on a subdivide office near the Commerzbank Tower …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *