The New Zealand Herald

GREAT ESCAPE

Kiwis benefit from surge in new airlines and routes

- Grant Bradley Coming up. The rise of specialist travel. Inside the travel industry

Flights between New Zealand and China are set to significan­tly increase this year with the signing of new air services deals.

From a limit of seven a week just five years ago, nearly 60 flights now go in both directions, and Transport Minister Simon Bridges hopes this will soon increase to 70.

This would allow more flights, primarily by Chinese carriers, but he said Air New Zealand could expand its services too.

Myanmar and Angola have also asked to start formal negotiatio­ns.

Although air services agreements do not guarantee flights will start, they are required by internatio­nal convention­s and provide the foundation­s for services between countries. Such agreements are largely responsibl­e for the big surge in travel by New Zealanders. The number of Kiwis travelling overseas has risen five-fold in the past 38 years to more than 1.1 million a year.

The attraction of New Zealand for tourists has also encouraged airlines to put on flights, but Kiwi holidaymak­ers benefit as airlines aim to fill northbound planes.

New Zealand has some of the most liberal open-skies settings in the world and Bridges said consumers were benefiting from the surge in new airlines and routes.

The country had about 80 agreements or less formal arrangemen­ts around the world, including 30 negotiated in the past five years. Coming negotiatio­ns were with Myanmar, Timor Leste, Kiribati, Jordan, Angola, Ecuador and Bolivia.

Myanmar was the only Asean country with which

Every time we have liberalise­d, Air New Zealand has risen to the challenge. Simon Bridges

New Zealand had no air agreement.

With the exception of Britain, European countries were “much higher fruit to pick and harder to get to with some of their protection­ist attitudes”, said Bridges.

“The paradox here is, despite internatio­nal aviation being one of the most obviously globalised industries, it is incredibly highly regulated by bilateral air services agreement. There are literally thousands of them in place, resulting in a very complex web of regulation.”

Although barriers to flying between countries had been easing since the turn of the century and the Government had embraced a more liberal approach, Air New Zealand was reaping benefits from more destinatio­ns and partnershi­ps and had weathered the competitio­n.

“Every time we have liberalise­d, Air New Zealand has risen to the challenge.

“The answer to protection­ist-type concerns is excellence.”

The agreements could also allow any airline to fly domestical­ly, which worries the New Zealand Air Line Pilots Associatio­n, already concerned about the risks of the safety standards dropping.

Bridges said he doubted another domestic operator would start up.

“I think there are number of things in the Asia Pacific that means those concerns are unlikely to be borne out.

“There’ s a real shortage of pilots.”

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