Bloomberg
Qantas Airways Ltd is gearing up for a Christmas rush, bringing back all its Australian workers and adding flights as the nation’s borders reopen after more than 18 months of near-isolation.
The airline will start its first commercial flights between Australia and India in almost a decade before Christmas, and flights to Singapore, Bangkok, Fiji, Phuket and Johannesburg will resume ahead of schedule, it said in a statement. About 11,000 staff who have been stood down during the
pandemic will return by early December.
The carrier will also bring back two of its mothballed giant A380s three months earlier than planned, and is in discussions with Boeing Co about accelerating the delivery of three new 787 Dreamliners which have been in storage for most of the pandemic.
The changes come after
Australia’s biggest state, New South Wales, said that from November 1 returning fully-vaccinated citizens would no longer need to spend two weeks in hotel quarantine, effectively ending a border ban that has kept the nation largely isolated from the rest of the world since the pandemic started.
“This is the best news we’ve had in almost two years and it will make a massive difference to thousands of our people who finally get to fly again,†Qantas CEO Alan Joyce said.
In a separate statement, Qantas said it will bring forward
international flights from Melbourne after the Victorian state government removed quarantine requirements for fully vaccinated travelers from November. Melbourne-London flights will start six weeks sooner
on November 6, followed by Melbourne-Singapore on November 22.
A quarantine-free travel bubble between Australian and Singapore is also set to open soon, leaders of both countries said.
“We anticipate that being able to be achieved within the next week or so,†Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said.