Ryanair Boeing 737-800. Photo by Andrew W. Sieber.

Ryanair Boeing 737-800. Photo by Andrew W. Sieber.

A little after 5:00am EST this morning, Boeing let the cat out of the bag: Ryanair is set to order 175 Boeing 737-800’s, which is the largest Boeing airplane order in Europe to date. Although an impressive order, the news was surely not breaking, since rumors of the order have been circulating for a while. 

“This agreement is an amazing testament to the value that the Next-Generation 737 brings to Ryanair,” said Boeing Commercial Airplanes President & CEO Ray Conner. “We are pleased that the Next-Generation 737, as the most efficient, most reliable large single-aisle airplane flying today, has been and will continue to be the cornerstone of the Ryanair fleet. Our partnership with this great European low-cost carrier is of the utmost importance to everyone at The Boeing Company and I could not be more proud to see it extended for years to come.”

BONUS: The five stages passengers go through when flying ultra low-cost carriers

Currently, Ryanair operates a fleet of over 300 737-800’s and it is expected that these new aircraft will help them expand their operations. When asked if Michael O’Leary, the CEO of Ryanair, if there were plans for long haul operations, he stated, “I don’t see an opportunity for the next two to three years.” In proper O’Leary style (who is not known to act like your typical CEO), stated that he was, “drunk at the time,” when asked how much he spent on the price of the aircraft.

When O’Leary was asked why New York City was chosen as the location of the announcement, he jokingly replied it was to help divert attention from the 787 within the US. He then clarified that about 50% of the airline’s shareholders are located on the east coast of the US. O’Leary stated he was planning on attending a few shareholder meetings to assure folks that the airline is not planing to start growing like “gangbusters,” and that they plan to have a more controlled growth.

This order also means that the Boeing 737NG will continue to be produced next to the 737 MAX for quite sometime. “As today’s announcement demonstrates, there is still significant demand for the Next-Generation 737,” Linda Lee, 737 Program Communications explained to AirlineReporter.com. “This demand is the reason we decided to boost production rates to 42 per month starting the 2nd quarter of 2014.”

Yesterday, Boeing had sent out notification of the announcement today and there was quite a bit of speculation, but now we know. We were hoping for something a bit more glitzy. I mean even, seeing the Ryanair logo on the new MAX winglet would be more exciting. I guess overall this is good news for both Boeing and Airbus right? Where an order for 175 airplanes from one airline just isn’t as exciting as it used to be?

David Parker Brown and Jason Rabinowitz contributed to this story. Also catch additional background information on Airchive.com.

TWITTER PHOTOS FROM THE RYANAIR 737 PRESS CONFERENCE:
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This story was written by one or more of our AirlineReporter staff members. Email us: staff@airlinereporter.com

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13 Comments

The worst airline on earth gets bigger. Yay.

But what does that say about the consumer? People might say they hate them, but the airline is successful right?

David

A sad truth. When one looks at the “decline” of the quality of service post-deregulation (at least here in the US), the finger really rests solely on the customer for choosing the dirt-cheapest option en masse regardless of the drawbacks.

RainCityFlyer

Yes, which is surprising why this was made into such a big deal by Boeing. I am sure that was because the customer asked for it. Although the news before was not confirmed and now it is.

David

Sleight-of-hand to distract from 787 problems perhaps?

Does the AR.com staff know that all the links at the top of the page (Home/Aviation in Seattle/Archives etc) currently link to a site selling female Viagra?

Ben Granucci

Uhhhh no they don’t. Browser hijack maybe?

Yea, not sure. Seems like every once in a while someone reports that issue. I have an external company that takes care of that stuff for me and they can’t find anything, so wondering some combination of hi-jacked browser and this site?

David

Jaded at this stage.

I suppose for Boeing, kind of explains their desire some time back to keep the RE 737 or new NB on the back burner as Airbus firmed up plans to launch the A320NEO.

aviation

It might be exciting for Boeing, but don’t forget that Airbus has been getting huge orders from AirAsia and Lion Air in Southeast Asia. In fact, Lion Air just ordered 234 planes from Airbus and AirAsia might order more soon.

bigbenaugust

So… they have seats in the hold now? Perhaps 8-abreast 737s? 😉

i think ryanair should go for the 787 and some more model aircraft because they are an Irish aircraft and air lingus are they have desired to go for the a350 and (if do that might be able to ge some more skymarks models built) 🙂 i can collect some more ryanairs

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