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Ryanair says second Covid-19 wave is 'biggest fear' after posting record £168m loss

First quarter passenger numbers tumbled from 41.9 million to 500,000 in the airline's most challenging quarter in its history

A Ryanair plane.(Image: PA)

Budget airline Ryanair has posted a £168m loss after suffering the “most challenging” quarter in its 35-year history.

The low-cost airline was among aviation firms across the globe forced to ground its fleet as Covid-19 wreaked havoc on timetables, with travel bans and lockdowns introduced worldwide.

It said a second wave of the disease was now its “biggest fear” - and also said flights to Spain will continue despite the launch of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ quarantine measures.

Restrictions amid the pandemic saw the company carry 500,000 passengers in the first quarter compared with 41.9 million in the same period last year, while revenue collapsed from 2.3 billion euro (£2.1bn) to 125 million (£113m).

The company said: “The past quarter was the most challenging in Ryanair’s 35-year history.

“Covid-19 grounded the group’s fleet for almost four months (from mid-March to end June) as EU governments imposed flight or travel bans and widespread population lockdowns.

“During this time, group airlines repatriated customers and operated rescue flights for different EU governments, as well as flying a series of medical emergency/PPE flights across Europe.”

Flights were resumed on July 1, and the company said it aimed to operate around 40% of its normal July schedule, increasing to 60% in August and 70% in September.