clipped_wings
Established Member
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2016
- Posts
- 1,109
...and whether you have to sit next to someone who has Covid 19 and doesn't know it
There are worse fates than Purgatory my friend.
...and whether you have to sit next to someone who has Covid 19 and doesn't know it
This decision will be driven by the backroom powerbrokers. An area where Q excels. The only way to counter this, if you want to, is to start bombaring your local Federal & State MPs letting them know that you don't want to see a Q monopoly.
Otherwise Q has the 'lobbyists' with a track record of getting what Q wants.
They seem to be tacking towards the same outcome but in vastly different ways. Which as you point out is entirely within step of each respective airline's management methods.Came across this article. Virgin is in negotiations with airports compared to Qantas's methods which I don't doubt for a second.
Qantas sparks airport conflict with plans to freeze rent payments
The airline has also deferred aeronautical payments for February and March, telling airports it will discuss repayment plans once the coronavirus crisis eases.www.afr.com
Came across this article. Virgin is in negotiations with airports compared to Qantas's methods which I don't doubt for a second.
Qantas sparks airport conflict with plans to freeze rent payments
The airline has also deferred aeronautical payments for February and March, telling airports it will discuss repayment plans once the coronavirus crisis eases.www.afr.com
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
This no doubt reflects the relative market power of the two airlines !
summary of the article for those on the cheap side of the paywall?Came across this article. Virgin is in negotiations with airports compared to Qantas's methods which I don't doubt for a second.
Qantas sparks airport conflict with plans to freeze rent payments
The airline has also deferred aeronautical payments for February and March, telling airports it will discuss repayment plans once the coronavirus crisis eases.www.afr.com
summary of the article for those on the cheap side of the paywall?
I’m somewhat amused by the commentary about wanting to avoid a QF monopoly when this is eventually over. I don’t think you will have that luxury at all. When this is all over I doubt that Australia will have ANY airlines.
I think Qantas will survive in someway - as there is still a need to have domestic travel - especially east and west coast of Australia.. I do hope Virgin will survive too but I think even if they survive, both airlines would be so different to what we know today. As to what form, I do not have a crystal ball to gaze...
Isn't that what the RAAF is for? If they needed more equipment in such an event, I'm sure there'd be some readily available 2nd hand bodies around, some hardly used (in Aviation terms).Yep - you won't see federal and state politicians schlepping away in busses, trains or cars to get to/from places, so I would expect some sort of airline service to resume in a country the size of Australia, at some point.
I’m somewhat bemused by the commentary about wanting to avoid a QF monopoly when this is eventually over. I don’t think you will have that luxury at all. When this is all over I doubt that Australia will have ANY airlines.
I feel that VA was too ambitious, and wanted a lot of "plushness".
I would have been happy if they were purely an Aust domestic mid budget carrier, with ecomX and the ability to buy "extra seating", but I don't run VA, and it was JB who wanted VA to fly to AUH, LAX, AKL/CHC/WLG/ZQN and HKG, where as partners would have sufficed, and VA needn't have spent so much money.