JetBlue seems to be setting its sights on its subsequent worldwide vacation spot: Lisbon.
A revealed checklist from Portugal’s slot coordinator confirmed that the New York-based service requested 840 slots at Lisbon Airport (LIS) for summer season 2024. Nonetheless, it’s unclear if or when JetBlue’s request can be accepted.
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The summer season 2024 journey season extends from March 31 to Oct. 26, and JetBlue’s request for 840 slots would translate to 2 day by day takeoffs and two day by day landings if accepted, in keeping with the aviation-focused Easy Flying web site. And it is extremely doubtless if JetBlue have been to fly to Lisbon, it might fly to the Portuguese capital from New York and Boston — JetBlue’s two gateways for service it already flies to Europe.
JetBlue didn’t reply to a request for remark by the point of publication.
The service has been formidable in its transatlantic enlargement, including flights to London, Paris, Amsterdam, Dublin and Edinburgh in the middle of two years. If Portugal offers JetBlue the greenlight, Lisbon would grow to be the service’s sixth European vacation spot.
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On the identical time, Lisbon’s airport is slot-constrained, and to date, JetBlue has not acquired any slots from the airport, making it unclear if JetBlue will be capable to add flights to Lisbon by summer season 2024.
JetBlue’s tried foray into Lisbon is going on because the service gained a reprieve for its slots at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol (AMS) after the Dutch authorities determined to stroll again its controversial plans to chop flight capability on the airport to be able to cut back site visitors and air pollution. If the Dutch authorities moved ahead with the plan, JetBlue would have misplaced its slots at Schiphol for summer season 2024.
JetBlue lobbied extensively towards the proposed flight caps, even asking the U.S. Division of Transportation to ban Dutch service KLM from New York’s John F. Kennedy Worldwide Airport (JFK) in response to Schiphol’s flight reductions.
However after dealing with intense strain from the U.S. and the European Fee, the Dutch authorities determined to place these plans on pause.
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Editorial disclaimer: Opinions expressed listed below are the writer’s alone, not these of any financial institution, bank card issuer, airline or lodge chain, and haven’t been reviewed, accepted or in any other case endorsed by any of those entities.