Good morning from Skift. It’s Thursday, September 14. Here’s what you need to know about the business of travel today.
25.08.2023 - 12:59 / skift.com / Alan Joyce / Edward Russell / Vanessa Hudson / In Asia / Airlines
The days when most Qantas travelers to the U.S. arrived in Los Angeles to connect on to other points across the country are numbered. The airline has ordered two-dozen new long-range planes for the Asia and U.S. markets that will see it add more nonstop flights to both regions, overflying traditional gateways like Los Angeles.
In other words, there’s more Dallas-Fort Worth or Seattle flying in Qantas’ future than Los Angeles.
The group on Thursday unveiled an order for 12 new Airbus A350-1000s and 12 new Boeing 787s. The planes, which will not begin arriving until at least the middle of 2026, will replace Qantas’ older Airbus A330s and A380s. They will also be used for new international growth.
The big change, however, will be how Qantas flies these longer routes to the U.S. and Asia. In 2019, the airline served four cities in the U.S.: Dallas-Fort Worth, Honolulu, Los Angeles, New York, and San Francisco, according to Cirium Diio schedules.
Of those, Los Angeles was far and away the largest gateway with an average of nearly 1,400 inbound seats daily. No other gateway even came close with the next largest, San Francisco, seeing an average of just 455 seats a day.
Qantas brought so many passengers to Los Angeles because more than half of its flights to the city were on superjumbo A380s, which it configures with up to 484 seats. The A380s, however, are aging and will begin retiring around 2032.
The A350-1000s Qantas just ordered: Only about 350-400 seats in a standard three-class configuration.
“With the aircraft we’re now ordering, we’re going to have more direct flights into the United States,” Qantas CEO Alan Joyce said during the group’s 2023 fiscal year earnings call Thursday. “So the need for those big aircraft is a lot less in the future.”
That growth will kick off in about two years when Qantas launches nonstop flights to London and New York from Sydney. Those flights, which will take up to 20 hours, will be flown with a special fleet of longer-range A350-1000s outfitted with just 238 seats and including a so-called wellness area for the very long flights. The new services are known as Project Sunrise.
“The key part of our strategy going forward with these aircraft is … about opening up new routes, more point-to-point routes,” Qantas Chief Financial Officer and incoming CEO Vanessa Hudson said Thursday.
Qantas returned to New York in June with one-stop flights via Auckland.
Other new U.S. destinations on Qantas’ radar include Chicago and Seattle. The cities are hubs for partners American Airlines and Alaska Airlines, respectively.
“We genuinely think there’s been a structural change to that and that people will never ever not be planning a holiday again after several years of being locked up,”
Good morning from Skift. It’s Thursday, September 14. Here’s what you need to know about the business of travel today.
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Good morning from Skift. It’s Wednesday, December 21, and here’s what you need to know about the business of travel today.