Article: Why Governments Monopolise Regional Routes

Hi Matt,

long time reader, can you look into Kangaroo Island with Qantas, every time I need to go there Qantas is charging ridicules money for this flight, which only takes 20 minutes to fly.

Regards
Paul H
 
Was reading about QF relinquishing Lord Howe earlier today, there will only continue to be a service because Skytrans are buying the 3 * 27 year old dash-8 aircraft from Qantas.

It was noted extending the run way would be too costly but feels very short sighted as eventually those old planes are going to become too costly to maintain (already the case for Qantas) so there wont be any planes that have the range to get there that can also handle the ridiculously short runway.

Seems like the government will then end up having to pay even more in the future to extend the runway anyway. Maybe kicking the problem down the road 10 years at best.
 
Hi Matt,

long time reader, can you look into Kangaroo Island with Qantas, every time I need to go there Qantas is charging ridicules money for this flight, which only takes 20 minutes to fly.

Regards
Paul H

This isn't a regulated route, so any airline is free to enter or exit the market.

It was a Rex monopoly route until a few years ago, until Qantas entered the market. Rex then threatened to pull out, reinstated flights, and finally exited for good in 2022.

Unfortunately, this means Qantas can pretty much charge what it thinks the market will bear on this route. Given it's such a short flight, and airfares are high, it's a good use of Qantas points if you're able to book Classic Reward seats. ;)
 
Was reading about QF relinquishing Lord Howe earlier today, there will only continue to be a service because Skytrans are buying the 3 * 27 year old dash-8 aircraft from Qantas.

It was noted extending the run way would be too costly but feels very short sighted as eventually those old planes are going to become too costly to maintain (already the case for Qantas) so there wont be any planes that have the range to get there that can also handle the ridiculously short runway.

Seems like the government will then end up having to pay even more in the future to extend the runway anyway. Maybe kicking the problem down the road 10 years at best.
I believe the ATR42-600S could do the job
 
This isn't a regulated route, so any airline is free to enter or exit the market.

It was a Rex monopoly route until a few years ago, until Qantas entered the market. Rex then threatened to pull out, reinstated flights, and finally exited for good in 2022.

Unfortunately, this means Qantas can pretty much charge what it thinks the market will bear on this route. Given it's such a short flight, and airfares are high, it's a good use of Qantas points if you're able to book Classic Reward seats. ;)
And from what I have online the new airline taking over will leave from t3 so we have a lounge access possibly which is a bonus
 
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I believe the VA flights connecting Perth to Christmas Island and Cocos Keeling Island are also regulated, as I saw an update that they were applying to renew their routes. Meanwhile, there is a 'Qantas Close' street on West Island, CKI ... maybe one day they'll regain the routes and fly business. We can dream..
 
I believe the ATR42-600S could do the job
I am not sure it has the required range. Apart from the short runway, I believe the issue is the fact that there is nothing else close. To allow for possible diversion, the plane basically needs the range to be able to fly all the way back to SYD if it can't land from some reason.
 
I am not sure it has the required range. Apart from the short runway, I believe the issue is the fact that there is nothing else close. To allow for possible diversion, the plane basically needs the range to be able to fly all the way back to SYD if it can't land from some reason.
Could the ATR work with a limited amount of passengers?
 

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