Ryanair hits out at 'bogus' noise claims and 'nimbys' living near Dublin Airport
Ryanair says the noise in areas such as Ashbourne, Ballyboughal, and St Margaretâs are within 'quiet, moderate, and general safe' ranges. File picture
Ryanair has hit out ânimbysâ living near Dublin Airport and said local residentsâ claims of excessive noises from flights are âbogusâ.
For its opening statement ahead of its appearance at the Oireachtas transport committee on Wednesday, the airline prepared a PowerPoint presentation calling on the Government to scrap its âunlawfulâ passenger cap.
It said that if the cap is not abolished, then the number of passengers at Dublin Airport must be cut, meaning fewer flights and higher fares, while it would lose new Ryanair routes to the UK and other EU states.
The transport committee is continuing its hearings on the Governmentâs proposed legislation that would allow the transport minister powers to revoke or amend Dublin Airportâs 32 million passenger cap directly, rather than through the planning system.
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The committee has heard from a range of stakeholders, with local residents telling members last week that the legislation offers no plan for those already living near the airport, many of whom have long raised concerns about noise and the health impacts of flight paths.
"I grew up on our family farm, which has been in our family for three generations and pre-dates the opening of Dublin Airport,â said Liam OâGradaigh from the St Margaretâs The Ward Residents Group.Â
âWe did not move to the noise; the noise moved to us. There is no getting away from the noise and air pollution.âÂ
Ryanair, in its submission to the Oireachtas committee, dismisses the local noise claims.
âDublin Airport opened in Jan 1940 â 86 years ago!!,â it says. âLocal nimbys moved in 1998 to 2020.
âThose who move/live near airport canât block [national] growth.âÂ
Ryanair says the noise in areas such as Ashbourne, Ballyboughal, and St Margaretâs are within âquiet, moderate, and general safeâ ranges.
The schedule for the committee hearing on Wednesday has Ryanair DAC chief executive Eddie Wilson listed as attending, rather than group CEO Michael OâLeary.
Aer Lingus, meanwhile, will tell the committee that the existing passenger cap is a âhistoric anachronism that needs to be urgently removedâ and warned that delays could see âsignificant capacity cutsâ next summer.
âIf the passenger cap were actually enforced, it would require a reduction of approximately 4.4 million passengers through Dublin Airport â over 12% of the current traffic,â it will state.Â
âThat would have a catastrophic impact on connectivity, on the airport, and on the wider Irish economy.
âAny delay materially increases the risk of enforced capacity reductions. This risk is particularly acute in respect of summer 2027.âÂ
 Airlines for America, which represents the likes of American Airlines, Delta, and United, will sound similar warnings.
âConstraining that connectivity is not a marginal policy choice,â it will tell the committee.Â
âIt carries national consequences. The loss of 4 million passengers as a result of enforcement of the passenger cap would cost the Irish economy between $4bn-$6bn, according to our estimates, driven by foregone visitor spending in Dublin and wider knock-on effects across the Irish economy.âÂ
The lobby group will also warn that if market access is âconstrainedâ, then it could trigger âretaliatory measuresâ from the US government that would âimpact both sides of the Atlanticâ.
âThis is ultimately a choice about Irelandâs position in the global aviation market â and about whether its primary gateway can operate in line with demand and with the agreements it has signed,â it will conclude. âWe believe the answer should be yes.â




