Showing posts with label Shannon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shannon. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Shannon Airport - Margaretta Darcy

The wife of Irish president Michael D Higgins has visited a 79-year-old peace activist who is being held in prison.
Margaretta D'Arcy was jailed last week for refusing to sign a bond to keep the peace and stay away from unauthorised zones at Shannon Airport.

Sabina Higgins has been friends with Ms D'Arcy for many years and is understood to have visited her in Limerick Prison on Sunday.

Aras an Uachtarain last night confirmed that Mrs Higgins had undertaken the visit in a "private and personal" capacity.
Irish president Michael D Higgins and his wife Sabina Higgins
Ms D'Arcy, who is a member of arts group Aosdana, is suffering from Parkinson's disease and has been diagnosed with cancer.

She had received a three-month suspended prison sentence in December for illegal incursion of the runway at Shannon Airport on October 7, 2012, in protest at the use of the airport by the US military.

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Shannon Airport - Jenny Lauren visits

A NIECE of fashion icon Ralph Lauren has denied getting drunk and assaulting a flight attendant before the plane was forced to make an emergency landing in Shannon, despite pleading guilty to the offence just a week ago.
Jenny Lauren (41) has spoken out for the first time since her appearance in Ennis District Court last week and has accused the airline of lying about what happened.
During her court appearance, Jenny Lauren admitted verbally abusing several members of the Delta Airline cabin crew and pushing one member of staff up against the aircraft wall.
“What Delta has said has been almost all lies,” she told the New York Post’s Page Six show-business column.

Shannon Airport - Cargo and Logistics

In the 1930s, aviator Charles Lindbergh designated Shannon, Ireland, as a strategic transatlantic location. Shannon Airport opened the first-ever duty free shop, the first tax-free industrial zone in the world and the first full U.S. Customs & Border Protection passenger preclearance in Europe.

Though the airport has served as a passenger transit stop for many decades, it is now putting a greater focus on freight, with a goal to grow its cargo activity and become a well-known transit stop.

“We welcome cargo activity,” says Joe Buckley, cargo & technical traffic business development manager at Shannon Airport. “A lot of airports aren’t as interested in cargo activity because there’s such pressure on passengers and passenger activities. Cargo becomes a secondary activity.”

Shannon Airport became independent from the Dublin Airport Authority in January 2013. Until then, DAA had held responsibility for Ireland’s three largest airports: Dublin, Cork and Shannon. But because Dublin so overshadowed Shannon in size, Shannon struggled as part of the organization, Patrick Edmond, group strategy director at Shannon Airport, explains.

“The Irish government identified an opportunity for Shannon to be at the forefront of Irish aviation policy because Ireland, for example, is very, very well-established as a jurisdiction for leasing and for air finance,” Edmond says. “About half of all the leased commercial aircraft in the world are actually managed from Ireland, and a very large number of those are managed from Shannon.”

After the airport gained its independence, it concentrated on the collection of aviation companies surrounding it. The Shannon Airport Authority’s International Aviation Services Centre (IASC) combines the airport, the adjacent industrial park and the nearby businesses. It was established in January 2013, the same time Shannon Airport became independent.

About 40 companies are in this Shannon aerospace cluster, with 1,600 employees and counting.

“What we are doing is building on the existing strengths in leasing, in MRO, in support services for airlines and in corporate aviation,” says Edmond, who also serves as IASC’s managing director. “We are attracting more companies in to build out that cluster further.”

Freight lanes from the Middle East, Central Asia and China going to the U.S. and the rest of the Americas are busy. Shannon is right in the middle, an ideal spot for a technical and transit stop.

At the end of December 2013, Shannon Airport welcomed Cathay Pacific’s B747-8 freighter on that aircraft model’s maiden flight to Ireland. The plane came from Sydney via Hong Kong and Dubai.

Shannon also sees scope for expansion in the local export industry, Edmond says. The U.S. has a robust financial relationship with Ireland. U.S. companies have US$204 billion (150 billion euros) in foreign direct investment in the European country, according to the American Chamber of Commerce in Ireland.

“A lot of that investment goes into high-tech companies and goes into, for example, pharmaceutical manufacturing, high-tech equipment manufacturing – things that are very related to air cargo,” Edmond says.

He says 40 percent of all U.S.-direct investment is in the Shannon area.

Air Cargo World

Airport Parking Ireland

Monday, December 30, 2013

Shannon Airport - Bumper Christmas

It proved to be a bumper Christmas for returning emigrants, with Shannon Airport set to record a 21% increase in passenger numbers over the festive season.

Some 43,000 passengers will fly in and out of Shannon over the Christmas period - December 21st to January 2nd – up almost 8,000 on the same period last year when over 35,000 travelled.   This will make it the first Christmas in five years that passenger numbers at the airport have shown an increase.

Said Niall Maloney, Airport Operations Director at Shannon Airport, “We are having a very busy Christmas here and particularly so this weekend.  This is the busiest period of the winter season and we also have our free Santa Flights with Ryanair resuming on Saturday and Sunday so it it’s all hands on deck.

“An airport is an emotional place anyway as families and friends reunite or say goodbye but it is particularly so at Christmas.  This weekend is probably the happiest of the year, though, and the buzz is fantastic as there are so many flying in to be home for Christmas.

“The arrivals area is where it all happens, particularly for US and London flights as they are full of people flying back from the States or, via London, from the likes of Australia, the Middle East, Far East and elsewhere.”

Airport Parking Ireland

Monday, December 16, 2013

Shannon Airport - Aer Lingus Expansion

Aer Lingus Regional is to expand its services at Shannon Airport including a new daily service to Bristol.

The move will see 20 new additional jobs at the airport.

The service, operated by Aer Arann, will lead to an addition of 100,000 passengers from new and expanded routes at Shannon.

The airline said the decision to expand its services to and from Shannon was directly related to the Government's Budget announcement to abolish the travel tax from April 2014.

Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport Leo Varadkar said the new services should help bring an additional 33,000 tourists to the mid-west region.

Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Edition he said that following the announcement in the Budget that the travel tax would be scrapped from next April, 23 new routes have been announced from Irish airports.

The Shannon-Bristol service will begin on 3 April.

Aer Lingus also announced it will double capacity on its Shannon-Birmingham route, and is offering pre-clearance connectivity from Birmingham and Manchester onto Aer Lingus' services to New York and Boston via Shannon. 

Shannon Airport - Operation Santa

Sunday, 15th December 2013: The wonder of Christmas unfolded in the skies this weekend for almost 2,000 children as Shannon Airport and Ryanair s magical  Operation Santa had lift off.

The children were taken 15,000 ft into the skies to meet with Santa on board the Ryanair flights.  They also got to lap up the Christmas party atmosphere generated at the airport, complete with Santa’s elves, cartoon costumed characters, a Punch & Judy Show, balloon artists and a range of giveaways.

The Santa Flights mark the commencement of Ryanair’s eight new routes – Berlin, Paris, Fuerteventura, Warsaw, Faro, Munich, Nice and Krakow – at the end of March.  This was a continuation of a memorable weekend of community engagement at Shannon Airport which started on Friday night with a free Christmas music celebration with Ireland’s first lady of traditional music, Sharon Shannon, in front of 1,200 guests to salute the airport’s first year as an independent entity.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Shannon, Ryanair and Santa

Ryanair is offering free flights to more than 3,000 children and the chance to meet Santa in the sky over the next two weekends – 14 and 15 December, and 21 and 22 December.
Ryanair will operate a total of 24 Santa flights where kids will get to meet Santa on board a 40-minute flight around Shannon. The free tickets are being distributed on a first come, first served basis. “Ryanair is delighted to team up with Shannon Airport to offer free Santa flights to over 3,000 lucky children over the coming weekends,” said Ryanair’s Maria Macken.
We look forward to welcoming the children on board for what should be a flight to remember.” AirportParkingIreland