Flydubai adds Greek islands Santorini and Mykonos to seasonal routes

Flydubai will run three flights a week to Santorini. (AFP/File)
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Updated 24 May 2021
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Flydubai adds Greek islands Santorini and Mykonos to seasonal routes

  • Dubai based airline to offer three flights a week to the islands
  • Additional summer getaways come as airlines try to start boosting passenger numbers decimated by pandemic

RIYADH: UAE airline flydubai has added the Greek islands of Santorini and Mykonos to its list of direct summer international routes.

The airline’s seasonal expansion comes as more countries open borders for travel and welcome tourists.

The routes will allowing more travelers from Dubai direct access to the Greek islands as a summer getaway.

The Dubai  based airline will conduct three flights a week to Mykonos and Santorini from June 18 to Sept. 29. 

The addition of these two flights brings the airline's seasonal routes to six destinations including Bodrum and Trabzon in Turkey, Batumi in Georgia and Tivat in Montenegro.

“Demand for travel has started to increase as more countries gradually lift restrictions on international travel,” flydubai CEO Ghaith Al-Ghaith said. “The UAE has recently added Bahrain, Greece and Serbia to the safe travel list, which has encouraged more people to start planning their summer holidays. Mykonos and Santorini will be popular choices for travel from the UAE and GCC.”

The UAE and Greece have agreed that travelers between the two countries will not have to quarantine if they have been vaccinated.

Emirates airline and flydubai will codeshare the new routes.


UAE uses AI to guide oil production decisions, transform factories, ports

Updated 22 January 2026
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UAE uses AI to guide oil production decisions, transform factories, ports

  • Move marks major step, says minister for foreign trade

DUBAI: The UAE is now using artificial intelligence to guide production decisions in its oil and gas sector, replacing traditional simulation-based methods, a senior official said during the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday.

Speaking during the Factories That Think panel, the UAE’s Minister for Foreign Trade Thani Ahmed Al-Zeyoudi said the move marked a major step in the country’s adoption of AI, robotics and digital technologies across manufacturing, logistics, and energy sectors.

“Now we are applying AI. The AI tells us where to produce. We don’t need simulation engineers anymore to tell us where,” Al-Zeyoudi explained.

He said digitalization was also transforming the entire value chain, adding: “Digitalization and digital twinning are not only happening in factories, they are now across the entire value chain, from extraction and manufacturing to logistics, distribution and customs clearance.”

Al-Zeyoudi highlighted the UAE’s global logistics network, and said: “We have historically invested heavily in logistics, and today we are connected to around 250 ports around the world.

“The majority of consignments are now cleared before they arrive. What used to take a few days now takes just a matter of minutes.”

The minister also discussed the country’s shift away from labor-intensive models, and said: “This is no longer about wages; it’s about digitalization and improving efficiency in how we run operations.”

Robotics are being deployed at industrial sites to reduce downtime, and Al-Zeyoudi said: “Sites that used to shut down for three to six months can now be monitored by robotics during operation, reducing downtime to just a couple of days.”