Ryanair plane in emergency landing after engine failure

A Ryanair plane was forced to make an emergency landing at Dublin Airport this morning after suffering engine failure en route…

A Ryanair plane was forced to make an emergency landing at Dublin Airport this morning after suffering engine failure en route to London Stansted.

The FR202 flight, which was scheduled to leave Dublin at 6.55 a.m., was in the air for some 15 minutes when passengers reported hearing a loud bang.

A short time later, it was announced the aircraft had experienced technical difficulties and would have to return to Dublin.

An Aer Rianta spokeswoman said a full complement of emergency services was present as the plane landed at 7.31 a.m.

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None of the 114 passengers on board was injured in the incident.

She described the incident as a category 2 level emergency, which is less serious than a distress call but more serious than an alert.

A passenger on the plane told ireland.comshe heard a loud bang before it was announced the plane would be returning to Dublin.

Ryanair confirmed one of its Boeing 737 jets had experienced difficulties. A spokesman said one of the plane’s engines suffered a technical problem. He said: "The plane returned to Dublin for precautionary reasons where it was inspected by engineers".

He said: "It was decided not to fly the aircraft and the passengers on the plane were accommodated on the next available flights to Stansted".

Details of where the aircraft was purchased or leased or when it was last serviced were unavailable.

In a separate incident a number of Ryanair passengers were stranded in Paris last night after the scheduled evening flight from Beauvais was delayed because of technical difficulties.

Irate passengers said they were left waiting some 8 hours, until 3 a.m., without food or accommodation before being told the 18.25 flight to Dublin would not fly until today.

The flight eventually left Beauvais today some 18 hours after its scheduled departure.

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy

Eoin Burke-Kennedy is Economics Correspondent of The Irish Times