Townsville Bulletin

Qantas plans for in-flight exercise

- ROBYN IRONSIDE

QANTAS is promising more leg room for economy passengers, an exercise area and a wardrobe in first-class suites when it starts flying non-stop from Sydney to London and New York in late 2025.

The airline unveiled its cabin plan with a total of 238 seats for the A350-1000 aircraft it will use on the routes.

The seat count is the lowest of any airline operating that aircraft, in an effort to increase comfort on flights of more than 19 or 20 hours.

Qatar Airways seats 327 passengers in its A350-1000s and Cathay Pacific 334.

The 140 economy seats will have a seat pitch of 33 inches, two inches more than the Boeing 787-9s Qantas uses on Perth-london flights.

Six private first-class suites will have their own wardrobe and bed, and a “wellness zone” will allow passengers to stretch and exercise on the long trips.

Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce announced an order for 12 of the A350-1000s, with the first two to fly daily from Sydney to London and New York.

Services out of Melbourne were also planned, and Brisbane could also see the A350-1000s.

“As we activate all 12 we are also looking at destinatio­ns like Paris and Chicago,” Mr Joyce said. “We would love to be able to go to Rio – so many destinatio­ns Qantas can fly to direct with these aircraft that it couldn’t fly to before.”

Although a premium price would apply for passengers in the front of the plane, Mr Joyce said economy fares would be similar to those currently charged for flights to London and New York.

He suggested the services would give frequent flyers an opportunit­y to use points amassed over the past couple of years.

“Lots of Australian­s are part of our frequent flyer program and we see a lot of redemption­s in those premium cabins,” Mr Joyce said. “We know a lot of Australian­s during Covid saved their points for opportunit­ies like this.”

However, it was unlikely he would be CEO by the time the first Project Sunrise flights took off in late 2025.

“I’ve always said I’ve committed to being here till the end of 2023, until the (Covid) recovery program is under way,” he said.

“A lot depends on what happens with the recovery of Qantas … I’ve said I won’t leave until that happens.”

A third-quarter update delivered on Monday showed the recovery was well under way, putting Qantas in a position to lodge the order with Airbus.

In addition to the doubleaisl­e A350-1000s, Qantas has ordered 40 single-aisle aircraft made up of A320neos and A220s, with the option of a further 94. The narrow-body jets will replace ageing Boeing 737-800s and 717s in the Qantas domestic fleet over the next 10 years.

Mr Joyce said the order demonstrat­ed the strength of Qantas’s financial position after a massive surge in air travel.

“We’ve seen a huge increase in demand; the business market is just back to where it was before Covid, the small business market is ahead of where it was, the leisure market is booming domestical­ly and internatio­nally and we’ve seen our debt levels get back to the levels we had pre Covid,” he said.

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