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CEO Ryanair says that if the jet fuel supply is disrupted in June, Ryanair may cancel flights.

Michael O'Leary, CEO of Ryanair, said that jet fuel supplies to Europe could be disrupted as early as June if the Middle East Conflict?does not?end in the next few months. This would force the airline and its competitors to cancel flights during the summer.

O'Leary stated that the Irish airline, Europe's biggest by passenger number, holds daily calls with its fuel suppliers throughout Europe to assess supply, which they say will remain steady until the end of may.

If this (the conflict) continues until the end of April we will be facing a supply risk in early June. O'Leary said at a press conference that if the conflict continues?into may, we won't be able to tell what's going on.

"If the fuel supply is at risk of being 10% or 20% in June, July, or August then we will be forced to cancel some flights or reduce capacity."

NO KNOCK ON IMPACT TO FARES

O'Leary told Sky News that the supply disruption would begin in May. He later changed his mind.

He said that the budget airline would cut flights on an ongoing weekly basis, focusing on airports with limited fuel supplies.

Ryanair cannot afford to cut out routes that are losing money, as European airlines earn most of their profits from June through September.

The United Kingdom, which imports oil from Kuwait in large quantities, is the European market that faces the greatest risk of a possible?jet-fuel shortage.

The International Air Transport Association warns that the impact of the war on supply will be felt most in the Gulf region, where 25%-30% of Europe's demand for jet fuel is sourced.

On Wednesday, the head of the International Energy Agency said that oil supply disruptions would increase in April and start to impact Europe's economic system. The biggest problem is likely to be a lack of diesel and jet fuel.

On Wednesday, European airline stocks rose in hopes of a deescalation. At 1455 GMT, Ryanair shares were up 4.1%.

O'Leary stated that Ryanair is not experiencing a significant impact from the conflict on its airfares so far and still expects to see ticket prices rise between 3 to 4% per year from April to June. Traffic will also grow about 5% during that time period. (Reporting and writing by Sam Tabahriti in Dublin, Editing by Sarah Young & Jan Harvey).

(source: Reuters)