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Aer Lingus says ash cloud chaos cost it 20m euros

BBC Published May 4, 2010 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Aer Lingus estimated the cost of volcanic ash cloud disruption to be about 20 million euros ($26.3 million; £17.2 million).
about 20000000 euros · disruption costabout 26300000 dollars · disruption costabout 17200000 pounds · disruption cost
Aer Lingus
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Irish airspace reopened at 1300 BST.
1300 BST · Irish airspace reopening
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Citation-ready fact
Total revenues for Aer Lingus fell by 1.8% for the three months ending 31 March.
1.8 percent · total revenues
Aer Lingus
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Aer Lingus reported an operating loss of 37.8 million euros for the quarter ending 31 March.
37800000 euros · operating loss
Aer Lingus
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The Association of British Insurers (ABI) expects travel insurance companies to pay out £62 million to passengers affected by ash cloud delays.
62000000 pounds · travel insurance payouts
Association of British Insurers (ABI)
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Aer Lingus suspended all services to the UK and Europe due to volcanic ash cloud.
1 services suspension · UK and Europe routes
Aer Lingus
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The ABI estimated that the £62 million travel insurance payout represents about 10% of the travel insurance market's income.
about 10 percent · travel insurance market income
Association of British Insurers (ABI)
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Aer Lingus has said that the disruption to air travel caused by volcanic ash cloud last month has cost it about 20m euros ($26.3m; £17.2m).

But it said this was an initial estimate, and the final figure depended on the actual level of customer claims.

Its comments came on the day that fresh risks from the volcanic ash cloud led to a further grounding of flights.

Earlier, all flights in and out of Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic were grounded.

Aer Lingus was forced to suspend all services to the UK and Europe, but has since begun flying again with Irish airspace reopened from 1300 BST.

Airspace over Scotland's Outer Hebrides has also reopened after an earlier closure.

In a trading update, Aer Lingus said that total revenues for the three months to 31 March fell by 1.8%. The operating loss for the quarter was 37.8m euros, compared with a deficit of 74.8m for the same three months of 2009.

The company said: "While the trading environment remains challenging, early indications on second quarter revenues are positive."

But Aer Lingus added: "We have limited visibility over the booking profile for [the rest of the year] and our key markets remain subdued.

"It is also uncertain whether the recent Icelandic volcanic eruptions will have a longer term impact on passenger travel plans."

Meanwhile in the UK the Association of British Insurers (ABI) said it expected travel insurance companies to pay out a total of £62m to passengers affected by the delays caused by the ash.

The ABI warned that this represented about 10% of the travel insurance market's income.

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