Aviation Gazette

Bringing the aviation news to you!

  • About me
  • Extra
    • In Loving Memory of Laurent Sorelli
    • Airport Webcams
  • iflyA380
  • Daily Email Information
  • Contact Me
AviationGazette © 2025 ______________________________ Log in
US DOT gives go ahead for Norwegian Air Shuttle to fly Ireland-US

US DOT gives go ahead for Norwegian Air Shuttle to fly Ireland-US

February 21, 2017 By bernard.montrel@gmail.com

It is beginning to look like there is no going back for Norwegian Air International’s plans to fly from Cork and Shannon to the US. Over the weekend, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the US regulator, cleared the Scandinavian-owned, Irish-registered airline, meaning that it now has both a foreign carrier’s permit from the Department of Transportation and authorisation from the body that oversees safety.
Some reports say that its Boston services will land at TF Green Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island, about 112km south of the Massachusetts city.
Ticket prices could be as low as €59, although it is unlikely that the airline will sell large numbers of seats at this rate. It is also thought that it will launch a Cork-Boston service first, following this with flights from Shannon, Belfast and possibly Dublin. It could begin New York services next year.
Low-cost services
Its parent, Norwegian Air Shuttle, wants to use the Irish-registered and based subsidiary to launch low-cost services connecting European cities with the US and Asia, mimicking the Ryanair model, but applying it to long-haul flights rather than shorter distances.
In much the same way as Ryanair did when it began to expand seriously in the 1990s, Norwegian intends flying to secondary airports in the US from Europe, as these will help keep its costs down.
Last week it confirmed that it has chosen Stewart Airport, about 60km north of New York city, as a base. Some reports say that its Boston services will land at TF Green Airport in Warwick, Rhode Island, about 112km south of the Massachusetts city.
Norwegian has not confirmed that it will be using either Stewart or Rhode Island for its Irish routes, but it has said that it will be flying to secondary airports. Whether or not these will prove attractive to Irish travellers remains to be seen. But it looks like it will be “game on” soon as a new competitor enters the transatlantic market.
The Irish Times

Filed Under: News

Search

Recents Articles

  • Norwegian Air Shuttle launches two flights from Bergen to the US
  • Mickey Mouse delays flight to London Heathrow by 4 hours…
  • King of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia brings 417Tonnes (metric tonne) and a gold escalator
  • McDonellsDouaglas MD-88 retire from the LaGuardia Sky
  • Forbes #1 US airline is: Alaska Airlines

Tags cloud

737 737-800 737NG 767 777 777-200 787 A320 A321 A330 A350XWB A380 Airbus Air Canada Air France Air Transat Alaska Airlines American Airlines Boeing British Airways California Canada China Cuba Delta Air Lines Dreamliner Egypt Embraer Florida France Israel jetBlue London Lufthansa New York Peoples Republic of China Russia Southwest Airlines Toronto TSA Union United-Kingdom United Airlines US USA