Emirates set to resume Nigeria flights

Supplied

Emirates Airline will resume services to Nigeria from October 1, 2024, operating a daily service between Lagos and Dubai.

EK783 will depart Dubai at 0945hrs, arriving in Lagos at 1520hrs, while the return flight EK784 will leave Lagos at 1730hrs and arrive in Dubai at 0510hrs the next day.

"The Lagos-Dubai service has traditionally been popular with customers in Nigeria and we hope to reconnect leisure and business travellers to Dubai and onwards to our network of over 140 destinations.  We thank the Nigerian government for their partnership and support in re-establishing this route and we look forward to welcoming passengers back onboard," said Adnan Kazim, Emirates’ Deputy President and Chief Commercial Officer.

With the resumption of operations to Nigeria, Emirates operates to 19 gateways in Africa with 157 flights per week from Dubai, with further reach to an additional 130 regional points in Africa through its codeshare and interline partnerships with South African Airways, Airlink, Royal Air Maroc, Tunis Air, among others.

Nigeria and the UAE have built strong bilateral trade relations over the years, headlined by Lagos as the nation’s commercial centre.

With the resumption of daily passenger flights, the airline’s cargo arm, Emirates SkyCargo, will further bolster the trade relationship by offering more than 300 tonnes of bellyhold cargo capacity, in and out of Lagos every week.

The Boeing 777-300ER serving Lagos will operate with 8 First Class suites, 42 Business Class seats and 304 seats in Economy Class.

 

More from Business

  • UAE announces VAT exemptions under amended law

    The Ministry of Finance announced the UAE Cabinet approved amendments to a Federal Decree-Law on Value Added Tax (VAT), which is set to exempt investment fund management services from VAT to stimulate growth in the investment management sector and increase the UAE’s attractiveness as a leading investment hub.

  • Brazil's top court says X paid pending fines to wrong bank

    Brazil's Supreme Court said on Friday that lawyers representing social media platform X did not pay pending fines to the proper bank, postponing its decision on whether to allow the tech firm to resume services in Brazil.

  • Abu Dhabi Investment Office announces animal feed markets tender

    Companies are being invited by the Abu Dhabi Investment Office (ADIO) to submit proposals to operate UAE animal feed markets.

  • OpenAI value climbs to $157bn in funding deal

    OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, has raised $6.6 billion (AED 24.4 billion) from investors, which could value the company at $157 billion (AED 576 billion) and cement its position as one of the most valuable private companies in the world.

  • India, US sign pact to cooperate on battery mineral supply chains

    Indian Trade Minister, Piyush Goyal, and US Commerce Secretary, Gina Raimondo, signed an agreement to cooperate on strengthening supply chains in the two countries for lithium, cobalt and other critical minerals used in electric vehicles and clean energy applications.