Trans-Tasman travel bubble ends dry spell

Trans-Tasman travel bubble ends dry spell

Trans-Tasman travel bubble ends dry spell which left thousands jobless and cost tourism billions

The much-hyped Australia-New Zealand travel bubble could pull the lever on a multi-billion-dollar jackpot for both countries.
Tourism operators and airlines Qantas, Virgin Australia and Air New Zealand, whose bottom lines have all been smashed by the coronavirus, will be the big winners.
The bubble, which NZ Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern finally rubberstamped to open in two weeks, at 11.59pm on April 18, has been mooted for almost a year.
Tourists snorkel over Flynn Reef off the coast of Cairns
Tourists snorkel over Flynn Reef, off the coast of Cairns. (Jason South)
Penned in since March last year, thousands of Kiwis and Australians are expected to jump on planes to enjoy international travel without the need for 14 days of quarantine on either side of the ditch.
More than 1.4 million Kiwis visited Australia in 2019, spending $2.6 billion, according to government figures.
Only China, with 1.43 million tourists, sent more visitors to Australia.
That pipeline of cash from Kiwi travellers has been switched off for 13 months.
New Zealand is also set for a major cash injection.
More than half a million Australians cross the Tasman each year to visit family and friends.
And Australian business travellers make 200,000 trips to New Zealand annually.
With no inbound travellers, coronavirus has obliterated tourism operators on both sides of the Tasman.
Jobs have vanished and thousands have been furloughed.
Last month Qantas reported a $6.9 billion drop in revenue for the second half of 2020 because of the virus.
Grounded Qantas and Virgin Australia aircraft are seen parked at Avalon Airport in Melbourne. Government-mandated travel restrictions grounded a significant proportion of Australia's airline fleet because of coronavirus last year.
Grounded Qantas and Virgin Australia aircraft are seen parked at Avalon Airport in Melbourne. Government-mandated travel restrictions grounded a significant proportion of Australia’s airline fleet because of coronavirus last year. (AAP)
Qantas planes parked on the tarmac at Sydney Airport, in Australia. Restrictions have been placed on all non-essential business and strict social distancing rules are in place across Australia in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Qantas planes parked on the tarmac at Sydney Airport. (Getty / Cameron Spencer)
Hong Kong-based Alton Aviation Consultancy director Bradley Dailey has forecast Qantas could hoover up as much as $8.5 million every month, if they use Airbus A330-300 aircraft on the trans-Tasman route once the travel bubble opens.
“We estimate that the monthly revenues from a daily widebody travel bubble return trip between Sydney and Auckland would gross Qantas on the order of $4.5 million to $8.5 million in passenger revenues,” he told nine.com.au.
To put this in context, he said, that financial boost is equivalent to 2 – 4 per cent of the average monthly passenger revenues earned by Qantas group from June through December last year.
Mr Dailey said if Air New Zealand flew Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners on the Sydney-Auckland route the Kiwi national carrier could gross between $5.2 million and $9.1 million each month.
A person flings them self over the edge of an AJ Hackett Bungy jump over Queenstown, in New Zealand's South Island.
A person flings them self over the edge of an AJ Hackett Bungy jump over Queenstown on New Zealand’s South Island. (Nine / Stuart Quinn)
“Considering that in 2019 Air New Zealand, Qantas, Virgin Australia, and Jetstar combined to average more than 3500 flights per month between Australia and New Zealand, the creation of a trans-Tasman travel bubble would be a welcome development for airlines from both countries,” he said.
The loss of international tourism cost the Australian economy $34.3 billion in 2020, according to Austrade statistics.
Most losses, around $22.3 billion, came in the last six months of 2020.
Contact me: msaunoko@nine.com.au

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *