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Jan 6, 2026

Ryanair steps up pressure on Taoiseach to end Dublin Airport cap

Ryanair steps up pressure on Taoiseach to end Dublin Airport cap
In a sharply-worded press release issued on 5 January, Ryanair accused Taoiseach Micheál Martin of ‘doing nothing’ to fulfil his programme promise to scrap Dublin Airport’s passenger cap. The statement, laced with characteristic Ryanair rhetoric, claims that lifting the ceiling would ‘create thousands of jobs’ and enable the airline to base an additional ten aircraft in Dublin next winter.

Ryanair’s intervention coincides with behind-the-scenes lobbying by other carriers and corporate-travel bodies who argue that the cap already curtails Ireland’s post-pandemic recovery. The airline contrasted Martin’s overseas trips—‘more than Elton John’—with what it views as domestic inaction, a narrative likely to resonate with SMEs dependent on competitive airfares.

The airline contrasted Martin’s overseas trips—‘more than Elton John’—with what it views as domestic inaction, a narrative likely to resonate with SMEs dependent on competitive airfares.

While the tone drew criticism from political commentators, the underlying message adds commercial heft to Minister O’Brien’s parallel efforts to remove the limit.

Ryanair steps up pressure on Taoiseach to end Dublin Airport cap


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Travel managers say the public spat underscores uncertainty: if the cap remains, airlines may redirect capacity growth to Shannon, Cork or European bases, complicating itineraries for headquarters staff in Dublin.

Environmental NGOs, however, seized on Ryanair’s statement to demand that any capacity expansion be conditioned on emissions caps and mandatory Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) blending targets, reflecting a broader EU trend to link airport growth with climate obligations.

With the 2026 general election on the horizon, analysts expect air-capacity policy to become a flashpoint between pro-growth and green factions within the coalition.
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