Norwegian has today announced the launch of new service from Tromsø to Manchester and Geneva for the winter 2024/25 season. Both routes will operate twice weekly with Manchester flights starting October 30th, and Geneva flights from November 1st.
On Wednesday (June 19, 2024), Norwegian Air Shuttle announced the opening of ticket sales for new routes from Tromsø to Manchester and Geneva for winter 2024/25. Starting October 30, 2024, flights between Tromsø and Manchester will operate twice weekly on Wednesdays and Saturdays through April 26, 2025. The new Tromsø-Geneva route will launch on November 1st, 2024, and will operate twice weekly on Tuesdays and Fridays through March 28, 2025. With the added routes, Norwegian will serve nine international destinations from Tromsø for the upcoming winter season.
In Wednesday’s announcement, Norwegian’s Commercial Director, Magnus Thome Maursund, said,
“Route releases are always exciting, and we are very happy that we can now announce more international routes from Tromsø. Manchester in England and Geneva in Switzerland are both exciting destinations, and we look forward to welcoming both Norwegian and foreign tourists on board, says Magnus Thome Maursund, commercial director at Norwegian.”
In addition to Manchester and Geneva, Norwegian also has direct international connections between Tromsø and Berlin, Paris, Milan/Bergamo, London, Copenhagen, Stockholm and Brussels, and domestically to Alta and Longyearbyen. In total, Norwegian will offer 198 routes to 77 destinations for the winter 2024/25 season, which runs from the end of October until the end of March.
Norwegian Air Shuttle was established in September 2002 with four domestic routes and has since carried over 300 million passengers. The airline Group, including Widerøe, is the largest in Norway and currently employs approximately 8,200 team members. Most employees are based in Norway in Oslo, Trondheim, Bergen and Stavanger, or at the company’s head office at Fornebu in Bærum. The carrier also has offices in Riga and Barcelona, as well as bases in Alicante and Malaga.
The Group’s fleet, including Widerøe, now totals 136 aircraft, with 87 Boeing 737-800 and 737-8 MAX jets in the Norwegian fleet, and 45 De Havilland Canada Dash-8 and three Embraer E190-E2s in Widerøe’s fleet. Widerøe Ground Handling also serves 41 Norwegian airports. Norwegian currently offers affordable flights on a short-haul network of destinations in the Nordic countries and to key European destinations. Norwegian aims to reduce CO2 emissions by 45 percent by 2030.
Source: Norwegian Air Shuttle/Mynewsdesk
Comments