EasyJet
In the late 1990s, a Swiss easyJet subsidiary was established in Geneva in fierce competition with Swissair, but the latter went bankrupt in 2001.
Up until September 2003 easyJet flew exclusively on Boeing 737s, like many budget airlines, but the Swiss base will be the first one to receive brand new Airbus A319 aircraft, which will also be introduced to the UK branch in 2004. They will gradually replace the 737s.
Most recently the airliner set up hubs in Newcastle and Paris, but its traditional home airports are Luton and Liverpool John Lennon airports, and Geneva Cointrin International Airport , London Gatwick Airport is a hub since British Airways reduced its number of flights from there and slots became available for easyJet. In December 2003 easyJet announced it would open a new hub in Berlin, at Schoenefeld airport, from which it will start flying on 11 routes from May 2004.
Amongst easyJet's main low-cost competitors in Europe are Ryanair, Air Berlin, Germanwings, Hapag_Lloyd_Express and BasiqAir.
EasyJet consistently features as the most popular search query[1] on Google UK.
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