“The headline result for international passengers is encouraging,but it’s a two-speed recovery,” Culbert said. “The lag is being driven by a lack of seat capacity rather than a lack of demand.”
Minister for Transport and Infrastructure Catherine King has been criticised over the federal government’s controversial decision to reject Qatar Airways’ application to double its number of weekly flights to Australia. Qatar’s application was supported by the bulk of the aviation industry as well as,according to industry sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity,the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade,Austrade,various airport owners and all state governments.
The application was not welcomed by Qantas,which has a code share arrangement with Qatar’s fellow Middle Eastern carrier Emirates and flies to Europe via Singapore. There was also opposition from a group of women who are suing Qatar Airways after beinginvasively searched before a flight in 2020.
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While Qantas and Qatar Airways are both in the Oneworld airline alliance,Qatar has a code share partnership with Qantas’ domestic rival Virgin Australia.
King has offered various justifications for rejecting Qatar Airways’ applications,ranging from the extra flights not being in the country’s national interest,to the extra flights having the potential to affect Australian jobs.
Allowing Qatar to make 21 flights each week would have lowered the cost of international airfares,and some economists estimated it would have generated an additional $500 million in tourism revenue and thousands of jobs.