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Feb 21, 2017 (newstodate): According to the latest counting, a total of 26 airlines will be operating at Iceland's Keflavik Airport during the coming summer schedule.
Iceland is seeing an increasing interest from airlines to connect to the country, but the bulk of the flight operations is still generated by transit passenger flights.
Icelandair will thus still account for 50.2 percent of the coming summer's flight operations, with WOW Air taking 2nd position with 27.2 percent, according to ISAVIA figures.
Among the remaining 24 airlines that has put Keflavik on the route map for point-to-point traffic, easyJet takes the lead with 4.5 percent of the flight operations, followed by SAS that will return a daily service from Copenhagen from March 24, 2017, after a lapse of two decades and to account for 2.6 percent.
Iceland is seeing an increasing interest from airlines to connect to the country, but the bulk of the flight operations is still generated by transit passenger flights.
Icelandair will thus still account for 50.2 percent of the coming summer's flight operations, with WOW Air taking 2nd position with 27.2 percent, according to ISAVIA figures.
Among the remaining 24 airlines that has put Keflavik on the route map for point-to-point traffic, easyJet takes the lead with 4.5 percent of the flight operations, followed by SAS that will return a daily service from Copenhagen from March 24, 2017, after a lapse of two decades and to account for 2.6 percent.