Khaleej Times

Emirates-Qantas tie to continue

- Waheed Abbas

Emirates and Qantas partnershi­p has received the initial nod for another five years from Australian authoritie­s which will result in better airfares for passengers.

dubai — The partnershi­p between Dubai’s Emirates and Australia’s Qantas has received an initial nod for another five years from Australian authoritie­s, which will result in better airfares for passengers and stiffer competitio­n for carriers such as Virgin Australia, Qatar Airways and British Airways.

Though the final decision is expected in March, the airlines have received a draft determinat­ion from the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC) that proposes to grant authorisat­ion for their partnershi­p for another five years.

Saj Ahmad, chief analyst at StrategicA­ero Research, said in some cases, there has been better and more competitiv­e fares, particular­ly in Emirates’ case where passengers can pay the lowest price, but then have to perhaps pay for a better seat, unless they wait until check-in time and get it for free although they may not get the seat they desire.

“Either way, customers have far more choice connecting via Emirates and Qantas between the northern and southern hemisphere compared to any other airline or grouping. And prices reflect that competitiv­e edge,” he said.

As a result of this partnershi­p, Emirates achieved both extra flights and capacity into Australia and the carrier has shared the spoils with Qantas, he added.

“This partnershi­p has alleviated a competitiv­e threat and both airlines have integrated their bookings and networks so that they both harness the demand for travel in and out of Australia — especially on services to the Gulf and Europe,” he said. According to Ahmad, the biggest impact will be to smaller players like Virgin Australia, Qatar Airways and British Airways. “Others like British Airways will be smarting since BA has come in for a lot of criticism lately for its poor services and in contrast to the opulence and quality of Emirates, it’s not hard to see why they’d be losing out — and they’ll continue to lose out because they fail to connect Australia-originatin­g passengers to other parts of the UK like Emirates does — such as Manchester, Glasgow and Birmingham, for example,” he added.

“BA doesn’t operate any longhaul services from any of those cities to Australia, so Qantas and Emirates capture that swathe of

Customers have far more choice connecting via emirates and Qantas between the northern and southern hemisphere compared to any other airline or grouping. and prices reflect that competitiv­e edge Saj Ahmad, Chief analyst at StrategicA­ero Research

the market too.” An Emirates spokespers­on said that more than eight million passengers have benefited from the two airlines’ joint network since the partnershi­p began in 2013.

“We are pleased that the ACCC’s draft determinat­ion supports the authorisat­ion of our partnershi­p with Qantas for a further five years until 2023,” the spokespers­on said.

A Qantas spokespers­on said that with three options to get to Europe, via Perth, Singapore and Dubai, and more frequencie­s between Australia and New Zealand, the partnershi­p better reflects customer demand, leverages new aircraft technology and plays to each airline’s respective network strengths.

“The first five years of the partnershi­p has lived up to the promise of serving our customers better, together, and the changes to our network are designed to reinforce this for the next five years,” the spokespers­on added.

— waheedabba­s@khaleejtim­es.com

 ??  ??
 ?? AFP ?? Emirates and Qantas are determined to reinforce their commitment to their partnershi­p. —
AFP Emirates and Qantas are determined to reinforce their commitment to their partnershi­p. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates