The Star Malaysia - Star2

To the sky and back

- By JAMIE FREED and CHEN LIN

QANTAS Airways Ltd said a seven-hour scenic flight over Australia’s Outback and Great Barrier Reef had sold out in 10 minutes, as it joined a growing trend in Asia offering “flights to nowhere” that take off and land at the same airport.

Tough border restrictio­ns to keep the coronaviru­s under control have led to a 97.5% plunge in internatio­nal travel in the region, according to the Associatio­n of Asia Pacific Airlines.

Many frequent flyers miss getting on planes and airlines including Taiwan’s EVA Airways Corp and Japan’s ANA Holdings Inc, desperate for revenue and to keep their pilots’ licences current, have offered special sightseein­g flights.

The Qantas flight, in a Boeing Co 787 typically used for long-haul internatio­nal journeys, will fly at low levels over Uluru, the Great Barrier Reef and Sydney Harbour before landing back in Sydney.

Tickets cost between A$787 and A$3,787 (RM2,374 and RM11,427) depending on the seating class and the 134 available seats were quickly snapped up, a Qantas spokeswoma­n said.

“It’s probably the fastest selling flight in Qantas history,” she said. “People clearly miss travel and the experience of flying. If the demand is there, we’ll definitely look at doing more of these scenic flights while we all wait for borders to open.”

Taiwan’s EVA used one of its iconic Hello Kitty livery planes for a special father’s day flight last month, while ANA used an Airbus SE A380 that usually flies to Honolulu for a 90-minute flight with a Hawaiian experience on board.

Tickets costing T$6,888 (RM978) for a Tigerair Taiwan flight from Taipei that will circle over South Korea’s Jeju Island reportedly sold out in four minutes. The price includes a one-year voucher for round-trip tickets from Taiwan to Korea, which can be used after Covid-19 travel bans are lifted.

Chen Shu Tze, 44, an engineer from Taipei, said she signed up for the flight because the voucher made it a good deal and she missed being able to travel – especially to South Korea, a favourite destinatio­n.

“The pandemic has a devastatin­g impact on the tourism and airline industry, so I want to help boost the economy, and I miss flying,” she said.

All of the countries where the flights are on offer have relatively low numbers of Covid-19 cases by global standards.

Among other airline stunts, Thai Airways Internatio­nal PCL this month opened a pop-up restaurant on the ground, offering in-flight meals served from airline seats to would-be travellers.

Carbon concerns

Singapore Airlines is also eyeing scenic flights from next month, the country’s Straits Times newspaper reported recently, an idea that received widespread criticism from environmen­talists and online commenters.

“First, it encourages carbon-intensive travel for no good reason and second, it is merely a stop-gap measure that distracts from the policy and value shifts necessary to mitigate the climate crisis,” said awareness group SG Climate Rally.

Singapore Airlines said it is considerin­g several initiative­s but no final decision has been made on whether to offer sightseein­g flights.

Qantas said it would pay to offset the carbon emissions on its scenic flight from Sydney, though online critics noted that would not actually reduce emissions.

The concept of scenic flights is not new. Antarctica Flights has chartered Qantas jets for scenic flights over Antarctica for 26 years. An Air New Zealand Ltd sightseein­g flight over Antarctica in 1979 crashed into Mount Erebus, killing all 257 people on board. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Children role playing as flight attendants during China Airlines’ ‘fly to nowhere’ event in Taoyuan City, Taiwan in August. — AFP
Children role playing as flight attendants during China Airlines’ ‘fly to nowhere’ event in Taoyuan City, Taiwan in August. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia