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Ireland aims to pass law lifting Dublin Airport cap by summer

Ireland aims to pass law lifting Dublin Airport cap by summer

By Kate Abnett and Padraic HalpinFri, May 22, 2026 at 12:40 PM UTC

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FILE PHOTO: People walk at Terminal 2 of Dublin Airport, Ireland March 22, 2025. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File Photo

By Kate Abnett and Padraic Halpin

BRUSSELS/DUBLIN, May 22 (Reuters) - The Irish government plans to enact a law by mid-July to lift a cap on passenger numbers at Dublin ‌Airport, which has come under fire from U.S. airlines, the country's transport minister said ‌on Friday.

The government is racing to lift the 32 million passenger-per-year cap, which is currently suspended pending a European Court ​ruling. The airport overshot the limit by 4 million passengers last year.

"It's my intention, if we can at all, with a fair wind, to get the legislation passed through the Dail (lower house of parliament) and Seanad (upper house) by the summer recess, which is the middle of July," Ireland's transport, energy and ‌climate minister Darragh O'Brien told Reuters ⁠in an interview.

"If it's not that, it will be early September," he added.

The number of passengers at Ireland's main airport was capped at 32 million ⁠by planners in 2007, in part to avoid local road congestion.

Some local residents support capping passenger numbers at the airport, which carries around 80% of the country's air traffic. Environment groups have warned its removal ​would weaken ​oversight of a high-emission sector.

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But the measure has been ​opposed by Irish airline bosses, who ‌warn it would damage the country's economy and harm plans to make Dublin an international aviation hub to rival London's Heathrow.

"Dublin Airport is of strategic national importance for our country, and the cap needs to be removed," O'Brien said.

U.S. airlines have also opposed the cap, prompting local carriers to warn that the U.S. government could retaliate and restrict transatlantic flights from Dublin if the cap is ‌not quickly scrapped.

Industry group Airlines for America filed a ​complaint with the U.S. Department of Transportation in January, accusing ​Ireland of breaching an EU-U.S. agreement granting ​airlines the right to operate in each jurisdiction and asking it to ‌curtail Irish carriers' access to the U.S. ​if the cap is not ​scrapped.

O'Brien said the U.S. government was satisfied with the timeline he had laid out.

European airlines have warned they could face jet fuel shortages within weeks as a result of supply ​disruptions triggered by the U.S.-Israeli ‌war with Iran.

Ireland is not facing imminent supply shortages, and the government's analysis foresees ​no fuel supply shortages for the rest of this year, O'Brien said.

(Reporting by Kate ​Abnett and Padraic Halpin; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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