Europe’s Connect aviation conference set to land in Kerry Airport

It is the first time an Irish airport will be the official host for the three-day conference

Kenny Jacob, Ryanair’s chief marketing officer, and a speaker at the Connect conference in Kerry Airport Kenny Jacob, Ryanair’s chief marketing officer, and a speaker at the Connect conference in Kerry Airport
Kenny Jacob, Ryanair’s chief marketing officer, and a speaker at the Connect conference in Kerry Airport Kenny Jacob, Ryanair’s chief marketing officer, and a speaker at the Connect conference in Kerry Airport

Kerry Airport is set to host the Connect aviation conference this week, which is the largest event of its kind in Europe.

It is the first time an Irish airport will be the official host for the three-day conference, which is expected to attract 450 delegates representing 50 airlines and over 150 airports.

The conference will offer delegates workshops, seminars, exhibitions, one-to-one meetings and social networking.

Speakers at the event include Ryanair chief marketing officer Kenny Jacobs, Flybe chief commercial officer Paul Simmons, Aer Lingus chief revenue officer Mike Rutter, CityJet chief commercial officer Cathal O'Connell, Air Arabia Maroc chief operating officer Laila Mechbal, and Simon McNamara, director general of the European Regions Airline Association.

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“To grow employment we need to increase inbound tourism and this conference gives us an ideal opportunity to do this,” Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport Paschal Donohoe said.

Denis Cregan, chairman of Kerry Airport, said the conference was an enviable opportunity for Kerry and for Ireland, and comes at a great time for the tourism sector.

“With ambitious plans for revenue from overseas tourism in Ireland to grow by €1.5 billion to €5 billion by 2025, industry stakeholders are being given the opportunity to meet some of the key decision makers as they plan for the coming years,” he added.

Smart agriculture

Meanwhile,

Intel

is this week set to open a dedicated lab in Ireland to focus on the Internet of Things (IoT).

The lab, called the IoT Ignition lab, will be officially launched on Friday at the company’s Leixlip campus.

The chipmaker has four IoT Ignition labs across Europe. It has one in Munich focused on smart cities, and another in Stockholm focused on telecommunications. The Istanbul lab creates interoperable IoT services, while the Swindon lab aims to help British companies develop connected IT projects in areas such as retail, transport and smart buildings.

The Irish lab aims to focus on smart agriculture, smart homes, smart buildings and smart cities. Hardware and software vendors, system integrators, business consultants and end users can come together with engineers to plan, build and test concepts. The lab space will include a collaboration centre for workshops and product training, a demo area and a development lab.