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A Boeing 737-800 aeroplane of Ryanair. Europe’s biggest low-cost carrier will reduce its operations out of Spain’s Alicante airport as the airport has imposed an €2 million charge on the airline to support its upgradation for using airbridges. Image Credit: EPA

Madrid: Ryanair Holdings will cut half its routes from Alicante, Spain, after the airport there said people must board via airbridges instead of stairs in a move the carrier says will cost it €2 million (Dh10.02 million) a year.

Ryanair faces a charge to fund the bridges at Alicante's new terminal and also prefers stairs because they can be used at both doors, cutting boarding times, it said yesterday. State airport operator Aena said the fee of about 30 cents a ticket "isn't really expensive" and that people find bridges more comfortable.

"Ryanair has been operating at Alicante for over five years without the use of airbridges and this decision is an abuse of Aena's monopoly," the Irish carrier said. "The new terminal has exactly the same stairs as the old terminal, which would allow Ryanair to continue to apply walk on/walk off boarding."

Sixth busiest

Europe's biggest low-cost carrier plans to eliminate 31 of its 62 routes from Alicante and reduce the number of planes based there from 11 to two, it said in a statement, adding that the service cuts will cost Aena more than €30 million in passenger and turnaround fees and lost commercial sales. "Airbridges are more comfortable and modern for passengers and that's the main reason Aena has decided to use them," Laura Baldo, a spokeswoman for the airport operator, said in a phone interview. "We aren't talking about a big amount of money."

Alicante is Spain's sixth-busiest airport, attracting 9.4 million passengers last year, according to Aena. Dublin-based Ryanair contributed more than 4 million, or in excess of 40 per cent of the total. The cuts, to be imposed in October, will reduce that to fewer than 1.5 million people, the carrier said.