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  • Qantas may cut all flights to Japan

    Low-cost airlines hit Qantas

    http://business.smh.com.au/lowcost-a...0512-2deh.html

    QANTAS has hinted that it could replace its remaining services to Japan with Jetstar flights, after warning the growth of low-cost airlines in Asia would "increase pressure on the viability of the Japan route in the medium to longer term".

    In an application to the International Air Services Commission (IASC), seeking a two-year extension of its current code share agreement with Japan Airlines, Qantas said it was "almost certain" that it would cut services to Japan if the deal was not renewed.

    However, even if the agreement was approved, Qantas failed to give any assurances that it would maintain it current level of flights into Australia's third biggest market for inbound tourists.

    In its application to the IASC, Qantas warned the emergence of low-cost airlines such as AirAsia, Tiger and Japan's Skymark was "likely to increase pressure on Australia's market share of Japanese tourists".

    Qantas also failed to rule out switching flights to Tokyo with its low-cost Jetstar.

    Despite the code-share allowing it effectively to share capacity with its only direct competitor on the route, Qantas said it was "sustaining siginificant losses", highlighting the impact of high fuel prices and the strong dollar on Japanese demand.

    According to tourism industry lobby group TTF Australia, arrivals from Japan fell 17.6 per cent in the year to March.

    The current deal was expanded in 2006, when Japan Airlines stopped its flights into Melbourne from Tokyo and decided to code-share with Qantas on the route. Since then, Qantas has replaced its services to Osaka and Nagoya with Jetstar, which forged a code-share with JAL last year.

    Jetstar declined to reject speculation it could eventually fly to Japan via its new Darwin hub with narrow-body jets.

    "The range of the A320 or the A321, without payload restrictions, you're looking at five to six hours," said Jetstar spokesman Simon Westaway. "That arc does cover a lot of exciting … markets that we could serve in the future," he said. Jetstar already flies to Singapore from Darwin twice daily.

    The longer-range A321 could easily reach most Japanese cities from Darwin.

    There is even talk Qantas could use its part-owned Vietnamese budget subsidiary, Pacific Airlines, to carry tourists between Australia, Japan and other major Asian tourism markets via its Ho Chi Minh hub.


    ^^ Geez I hope they keep NRT flights. I'm from Melbourne and it will be another route for which we will have to transit through SYD/BNE in order to get to.


  • #2
    It is hard to believe that QF would drop NRT. At the minimum, NRT-SYD would be a business route and thus makes sense for QF to keep it.

    But frankly, all other Australia-Japan routes are probably more tourist oriented and JetStar would be a more appropriate candidate to fly.
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    • #3
      JAL served SYD-NRT. Although it seems weird, maybe thye would rely upon JAL to get passengers to NRT? That just seems very weird to me, but then again, if you are not making a profit - then codeshare, and now with JAL within OneWorld, it makes it that much easier. Anyway, as for all of the other routes, give them to JetStar - lower costs and greater profit margin.
      Whatever is necessary, is never unwise.

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