Qantas, Emirates seal 'extensive' alliance


Si sanno le sorti dei pax che viaggiano da SYD/MEL fino a DXB con QF in Y+ e poi prendono una connessione su metallo EK?
Se dovessero viaggiare in Y, per di piu' nella configurazione EK, il prodotto Y+ di QF perderebbe sicuramente attrattiva.
 
Qantas and Emirates trans-Tasman alliance in the hands of New Zealand's Transport Min

[h=1]Qantas and Emirates trans-Tasman alliance in the hands of New Zealand's Transport Minister[/h]
Qantas and Emirates’ global alliance has already been granted interim approval by Australia’s competition regulator, but the New Zealand Government is yet to pass judgment on the partnership to be extended across the Tasman.
In Sep-2012 Qantas and Emirates announced a long-anticipated partnership proposal, the first of a world-shaking series of announcements over following weeks, in which the three Gulf airlines, Emirates, Etihad and Qatar Airways, drove a massive wedge in the resistance of their major legacy airline opponents.
Once finally approved, all Qantas group airlines, including Jetstar, will be permitted to share passenger and freight revenues, codeshare and otherwise act almost as one airline.

The alliance has, however, met with stiffer resistance in New Zealand than was the case in Australia, particularly from airports concerned that the union will turn the competitive trans-Tasman route into an effective duopoly. The combination of Air New Zealand/Virgin Australia and Qantas/Jetstar/Emirates would provide about 95% share of all capacity on the route and all of the seats on routes other than to and from Auckland.
See related story: Qantas and Emirates to codeshare in first alliance shakeup of the season; next: Qatar into oneworld
[h=2]Trans-Tasman alliance approval is in the hands of the New Zealand Minister of Transport[/h] Although there are still some near-formalities to be completed, the Australian Consumer and Competition Commission (ACCC) has all but approved the extensive agreement which will link the futures of Qantas and Emirates. Nothing is ever certain in the grey world of competition law, but all looks set to be operational. But there is also a New Zealand aspect to the agreement.
Unlike the decision in Australia, which is made by the competition regulator, the trans-Tasman component of the alliance is subject to approval from New Zealand Minister of Transport Gerry Brownlee, rather than New Zealand's equivalent, the NZ Commerce Commission. Mr Brownlee will make his decision on advice from the Ministry of Transport under section 88 of the Civil Aviation Act 1990.
The minister has the authority under the Civil Aviation Act 1990 to rule on arrangements between two airlines where the arrangement involves the fixing of tariffs or capacity of international air services, as is the case in the Qantas/Emirates alliance.
In approving an arrangement the minister must consider the effects of the arrangement on international comity between New Zealand and other states in relation to international aviation agreements.
He must also ensure that an arrangement does not disadvantage consumers or prevents competitors from entering the market.
Submissions on the Qantas and Emirates alliance application to the Ministry of Transport closed on 19-Oct-2012, and the ministry will provide its advice to Mr Brownlee by Mar-2013.
[h=2]The ACCC has all but approved Qantas and Emirates alliance, excluding the Tasman [/h] The ACCC has meanwhile all but given its blessing for the alliance, granting Qantas and Emirates’ request for interim approval on 17-Jan-2013, allowing the carriers to start implementing their agreement and ensuring the alliance can take effect from 01-Apr-2013 and in time for the northern hemisphere summer schedules, subject to final approval being given.
However, the interim approval excludes the trans-Tasman route, where the ACCC holds concerns that the alliance will increase the ability and incentive for Qantas and Emirates unilaterally to reduce or limit growth and capacity on the four key city pairs absent the capacity condition in order to raise air fares.
Approval must be granted on both sides of the Tasman to allow the alliance to be extended to New Zealand.
The ACCC gave its draft approval for the wide-ranging partnership on 20-Dec-2012. The regulator considered that “the alliance is likely to result in material (although not substantial) public benefits." Final approval is expected in Mar-2013.
The only modest restriction placed on the carriers was a requirement that they maintain FY2012 capacity levels on four key trans-Tasman routes where their existing networks overlap. Those routes are Sydney-Auckland, Melbourne-Auckland, Brisbane-Auckland and Sydney-Christchurch which together accounted for about 65% of total seat capacity on the trans-Tasman in the year to 30-June-2012.
Approval was also granted for just five years, instead of the 10 year authority requested by the airlines.
See related article: Qantas-Emirates alliance receives full (draft) approval from Australia's competition authority
[h=2]Qantas and Emirates assert air fare and capacity fixing deal will improve competition[/h] In their application to the New Zealand Ministry of Transport the partners repeat the assertion made to the ACCC that the alliance “will arrest the terminal decline of the international operations of Qantas”.
The alliance will involve fixing fares and capacity, but Qantas and Emirates argue this will have no negative effect on competition, but rather, will be “pro-competitive” and result in significant public benefits to New Zealand including:

  1. Committing to maintain existing levels of capacity which should lead to lower fares and better product and service offering from competitors.
  2. A significantly expanded global network allowing seamless travel from New Zealand to Australia, Europe, including Britain, the Middle East and North Africa.
  3. Enhanced benefits from frequent flyer programmes.
  4. Establishing a long-term business model to optimise the operating performance of both Qantas and Emirates, including reducing costs.
  5. Increasing tourism and employment, promoting international trade.
  6. Materially enhancing and accelerating Emirates’ long-term growth strategy in New Zealand and Australia.
The New Zealand Airports Association (NZAA) cautions in its submission that “it is important to remember that there is no guarantee that these claimed benefits will materialise and that, if they do, there is no guarantee of the extent to which they would be passed on to the end consumers.
"It is notable that many of the stated benefits would be expected primarily to enhance the market positioning and market share of the Applicants as opposed to delivering market growth above that which would be expected in the absence of the proposed activity.”
The NZAA submitted that the trans-Tasman market is a “highly concentrated market” as measured by the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) allowing for the existing airline groupings of Qantas/Jetstar and ANZ/Virgin Australia. The NZAA also submitted that adding Emirates to the Qantas group will increase the HHI by another 923 points to 4,661. An increase of 200 points is considered as the point at which market power is likely to be enhanced, reducing competition and leading to higher fares.
But Qantas and Emirates suggest the real competitive rivalry exists between the Qantas/Jetstar and ANZ/Virgin Australia groupings. This indeed is a point which is currently highly relevant in the Australian domestic market too, as the whole competitive dynamics of airline markets are changing. There, Virgin Australia argues its proposed acquisition of control of LCC, Tiger Australia, while taking a competitor out of the market, would actually enhance Virgin's competitiveness against a dominant Qantas.
Yet, as NZAA notes, in respect to the Air NZ/Virgin Australia alliance, Qantas told the ACCC in Oct-2010 that “Emirates operates as a constraint at a fare level and adds a significant amount of capacity to some trans-Tasman routes”.
[h=2]Alliance is a lifeline for Qantas loss-making long-haul network[/h] For Qantas the alliance is a lifeline to stem the losses on its long-haul network where it is unable to compete as an end of line carrier against dominant sixth freedom network carriers like Emirates, Singapore Airline and Cathay Pacific.
Qantas reported an AUD450 million (USD469 million) loss on its long-haul international operations in the financial year to 30-Jun-2102 and its international market share has declined as liberalisation spread.
[h=2]In return Emirates gains greater access to the Australian and New Zealand markets[/h] Emirates will benefit from gaining access to the Australian and New Zealand domestic networks allowing it to market services to Wellington, Dunedin and Queenstown served by Qantas and Jetstar, but where Emirates cannot operate its own long-haul aircraft due to runway restrictions.
Emirates launched trans-Tasman services in Aug-2003 as an extension to its Dubai-Australia long-haul network and currently operates daily services to Auckland from Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane as well as a daily service between Sydney and Christchurch.
Emirates argues that by placing its code on Qantas’ trans-Tasman services it will effectively increase its frequencies on the route. In particular it will allow the carrier to sell and market services to Wellington on Qantas aircraft. Emirates’ large long-haul aircraft are not able to land at Wellington International Airport.
Emirates believes capacity restrictions under the current air services agreement between New Zealand and the United Arab Emirates are likely to be eased as a result of the New Zealand Government’s new international air transport policy announced on 20-Aug-2012, promoting greater liberalisation under reciprocal open skies agreements.
[h=2].. allowing Emirates to grow its presence in New Zealand[/h] This, Emirates suggests, will help grow its presence in New Zealand in the longer term.
In reality, however, opponents argue that Emirates’ growth is likely to be limited to codeshare passengers on Qantas services because Emirates’ growth using its own aircraft is constrained by the scheduling window dictated by its long-haul flights between Australia and Dubai.
Average load factors of about 67% would also suggest it is unlikely to deploy more capacity in the foreseeable future.
But Qantas and Emirates say cooperation on the Tasman will allow them to better match aircraft size to service joint passenger demand, exploiting economies of scale of larger aircraft and reduce unit costs.
There are certainly opportunities for the two carriers to consolidate flights by removing wing-tip services on four frequencies. Emirates’ Brisbane-Auckland services operates at an identical time to Qantas’ service while the Sydney-Auckland services operates 25 minutes apart.
Qantas’ Auckland-Melbourne service also leaves only five minutes ahead of the Emirates service and 10 minutes ahead of Emirates’ Sydney-Auckland frequency.
Emirates frequencies vs nearest Qantas frequencies
qf-ek-schedules.PNG

Source: CAPA – Centre for Aviation & Innovata
[h=2]ACCC fails to take up Auckland-Adelaide route offer[/h] Better feeder traffic could also improve demand on typically marginal secondary trans-Tasman routes and 'potentially' allow the alliance to launch new services from Auckland to Adelaide, currently served only by Air NZ with a daily A320 operation.
Qantas operated the Auckland-Adelaide route between Dec-2004 and Jul-2007 three times a week, but withdrew after declaring the route unviable.
Emirates launched a four times weekly Dubai-Adelaide service in Nov-2012 and will move to a daily service from 02-Feb-2013.
Perhaps surprisingly, in light of this concession, the ACCC has elected not to extract a commitment from Qantas to open any new routes.
While the Qantas/Emirates alliance has the Qantas long-haul survival at its core, Air NZ questioned the rationale for including the Tasman to the arrangement. The New Zealand flag carrier, which partners with Qantas competitor Virgin Australia, estimates that just 25% of traffic on Qantas and Emirates trans-Tasman services is to or from markets beyond Australia.
Air NZ is also concerned about the open ended nature of the application which includes vague statements such as “the exact scope of the proposed conduct may change” and “the applicants may commence code sharing on Jetstar”.
[h=2]Alliance promises New Zealand tourism growth through expanded global network[/h] Qantas and Emirates expect their alliance will stimulate growth in inbound tourism to New Zealand through their expanded network, allowing for two-stop travel from Europe and the Middle East and North African region via Dubai and Australia.
Certainly, Emirates’ multiple European points could benefit New Zealand tourism by encouraging more dual destinations travel.
The alliance should also boost inbound tourism for example from Malaysia by linking Emirates’ Kuala Lumpur-Melbourne service to combined trans-Tasman services.
Such dual destination tourism is increasingly important to New Zealand given the number of travellers that combine Australia and New Zealand in a single holiday, especially by Asian tourists.
While the alliance in its initial form is restricted to routes between New Zealand, Australia, Dubai and on to Europe, Qantas and Emirates intend to cooperate on a global, network basis.
[h=2]Emirates president wants A380 link across the Pacific[/h] Emirates president Tim Clark said in Jan-2013 that he wants to extend the alliance with Qantas across the Pacific to create a round the world A380 service via Los Angeles. Mr Clark told Bloomberg that while the focus of the alliance was on long-haul routes to Europe and within Australia, it did not prevent the development of trans-Pacific routes.
Qantas may not be as keen on the idea of sharing the still-relatively profitable Los Angeles route with Emirates. Qantas' existing codeshare partner on the route and throughout the US, American Airlines, may also be equivocal on the proposal. However, American is itself going through alliance hoops, including forming a relationship with Emirates competitor from the Gulf, Qatar Airways, which is about to join oneworld.
Qantas currently operates double daily service between Sydney and Los Angeles, using an A380 on one of those frequencies and a Boeing 747-400 on the other. At the other end, Emirates, however, operates only a daily Boeing 777-300ER between Los Angeles and Dubai.
In addition, under the current schedule – which depends on Australian-US customer preferences and the respective airport slots – a lengthy lay-over would be required in Los Angeles, with Emirates’ existing service arriving from Dubai at 12:50, but Qantas’ A380 service not departing for Sydney until 23:20.
Similarly Qantas’ A380 service arrives in Los Angeles from Sydney at 09:40, while Emirates’ existing service does not depart Los Angeles for Dubai until 16:00.
[h=2]The trans-Tasman market is dominated by Air New Zealand/Virgin Australia and Qantas/Jetstar[/h] A total of seven airlines operate on the Tasman including ANZ/Virgin Australia, Qantas/Jetstar, Emirates, LAN Airlines and China Airlines (the latter three operating with fifth freedom rights on this liberal route).
Air NZ dominates capacity with 30,160 seats in the week 21-Jan-2013 to 27-Jan-2013, followed by Qantas with 17,069 seats.
Top seven airlines on the trans-Tasman route ranked by seats: 21-Jan-2013 to 27-Jan-2013
trans-tasman-top-airlines.PNG

Source: CAPA – Centre for Aviation & Innovata
Auckland-Sydney is the biggest route, offering 21,575 seats in the week 21-Jan-2013 to 27-Jan-2013.
Top trans-Tasman routes ranked by seats: 21-Jan-2013 to 27-Jan-2013
trans-tasman-top-routes.PNG

Source: CAPA – Centre for Aviation & Innovata
[h=2]Emirates brought significant competition to the trans-Tasman market[/h] Emirates’ entry to the trans-Tasman in 2003 added about 15% capacity to the route using a mix of long-haul widebody aircraft. It currently deploys A380s to Auckland from Sydney and Melbourne and operates Boeing 777-300s between Brisbane and Auckland, and Sydney to Christchurch, according to Innovata.
But the partners claim that Emirates imposes limited price constraint on Qantas and Jetstar on the Tasman due to its relatively small share of traffic of about 8.8% in FY2012.
Under the alliance Qantas/Jetstar and Emirates would have a combined share of traffic of 39.6%, compared to 56.7% held by the Air NZ/Virgin Australia alliance, according to application documents.
However, on a seat capacity basis Emirates offered 14% of all seats on the Tasman in FY2012, only slightly below Virgin Australia’s 15.2%.
A combined Qantas/Jetstar/Emirates grouping would command a 45.8% share based on FY2012 figures against 50.1% from the Air NZ/Virgin Australia grouping.
Furthermore, while Emirates operates on just four of the 22 trans-Tasman routes, those four routes account for 65.1% of total Tasman capacity, arguably making Emirates’ competitive influence on the overall market disproportionately greater.
Emirates’ capacity influence from just four daily frequencies is further demonstrated by its 24.7% share between Melbourne and Auckland in the week 21-Jan-2013 to 27-Jan-2013, and 38.6% between Sydney and Christchurch, according to Innovata data. Emirates offers 16% of seats on the Sydney to Auckland route.
[h=2]New Zealand transport minister must assess the competitive balance
[/h] Emirates is the only other competitor of scale on the Tasman. Its daily services on the four biggest trans-Tasman routes are limited to afternoon arrivals and departures in New Zealand, which, while not attractive to time-sensitive business travellers, target the leisure market.
Emirates initially at least, deployed its large long-haul aircraft on the Tasman on a marginal cost basis in preference to leaving the aircraft parked at Australian airports awaiting their return leg to Dubai in the evening.
However, Qantas and Air NZ argued, unsuccessfully, in 2006 that regulators should approve a trans-Tasman alliance between the two flag carriers in the face of the growing competition from the Gulf carrier's "capacity dumping".
New Zealand’s minister of transport will have to weigh up whether removing Emirates now as the effective third competitor on the trans-Tasman route, in effect creating a duopoly with broader global reach, is in the interests of consumers and competition. His mandate is somewhat different from the more narrow, formalistic considerations that competition law impose. That does not necessarily make it any easier to come up with the 'right' decision.
 
Qantas Plans Earlier Asia Arrivals Amid Business Class Push


Qantas Airways Ltd. (QAN), Australia’s largest carrier, will fly seven Asian routes earlier in the day as a partnership with Emirates gives it more scope to run flights at times that appeal to business class passengers.

The carrier will also look at whether to run direct flights from Australia to Beijing, Delhi and Mumbai from 2016, when it can exercise options to buy as many as 50 Boeing Co. (BA) 787-9 Dreamliners, it said in a regulatory statement. More 787 flights may be added to Seoul and Tokyo, Sydney-based Qantas said, where four of five direct routes are operated by its budget arm Jetstar and code-share partners.

Qantas international chief Simon Hickey wants to reschedule flight times to deliver better service to Asian destinations and win major corporate customers. The airline has spent A$9 million ($9.4 million) upgrading lounges in Hong Kong and Singapore and is considering refurbishing its Airbus SAS A330 aircraft to include lie-flat beds in business class, it said.

“There’s still some work to be done on this,” Russell Shaw, an analyst at Macquarie Group Ltd. in Sydney, said by phone. “I’d think this will be the first announcement of several as they ramp up these connections.”

Flights into Hong Kong, Singapore and Bangkok will be brought forward by as much as about four hours using capacity freed up by the agreement with Emirates. Service to Frankfurt will stop operating April 15, six months earlier than originally announced on April 15, Qantas said.

Trips from Melbourne to Singapore and Hong Kong, which currently arrive at 9 p.m. and 7:20 p.m., local time, will be moved to 5:10 p.m. and 3:55 p.m. to allow more connections into Asia and save passengers from having to stay overnight en route, according to a table provided with the announcement.

“The joint Qantas-Emirates network into Asia gives our customers a fresh set of options,” Hickey said in the statement. “Through a combination of Qantas, Jetstar and our partners we aim to provide the best travel options between Australia and Asia.”

The carrier is partnering with Emirates in a bid to end as much as A$450 million ($469 million) of annual losses on international routes. The so-called kangaroo route to Europe, which had previously transferred through Singapore, Hong Kong, and Bangkok, will be moved to the Gulf carrier’s Dubai hub and a 17-year alliance with British Airways on the long-haul routes will be dropped as a result.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...flights-to-asia-amid-business-class-push.html
 
Qantas ed Emirates illustrano i benefici dell'accordo per i frequent flyer:

Qantas and Emirates unveil frequent flyer benefits

Qantas and Emirates today unveiled details of benefits that will be available to frequent flyers through their proposed partnership.
The partnership, which remains subject to regulatory approval, is designed to offer customers a seamless travel experience across one of the world’s largest networks.

Some of the key benefits that Qantas Frequent Flyer and Emirates Skywards members will be able to access for travel from 31 March 2013 are:

  • Earn Qantas Frequent Flyer points or Emirates Skywards Miles on Emirates and Qantas flights (with some exceptions for Emirates Skywards members on the Qantas domestic network).
  • An expanded network for members of each program to earn Qantas Status credits and Status bonus or Skywards Tier Miles and Tier bonus.
  • Redeem points/Miles on any part of the Qantas or Emirates network – a combined total of more than 175 destinations worldwide.
  • Access to both Qantas and Emirates lounges for Gold members (or above) of either program in Australia, Europe, Asia, the Middle East and North Africa.
  • Have their tier status in either program recognised with both airlines when flying on the joint Qantas-Emirates network (where available).
    (See attached factsheet for more detail and eligibility criteria.)
    Chief Executive of Qantas Loyalty, Lesley Grant, said the benefits announced today would give frequent flyers of either airline the opportunity to earn and redeem points or Miles across a massive network.
    “Our shared goal has been to offer Qantas and Emirates customers the best global network, flying the largest combined A380 fleet and supported by the bestrewards for our frequent flyers,” said Ms Grant.
    “Both airlines already offer some of the highest quality travel experiences, including our lounges and loyalty benefits, so this is about bringing together the best of both worlds,” she added.
  • Thierry Antinori, Emirates’ Executive Vice President, Passenger Sales Worldwide said: ”It is an exciting time to be an Emirates Skywards member, yesterday we announced Platinum – our new tier, which has been developed to enhance the travel experience for frequent travellers and to offer additional benefits to Emirates Skywards members who have earned over 150,000 Tier Miles in a year.
    “Now today we are unveiling the wide range of benefits that our members can enjoy as part of the Emirates and Qantas partnership,” added Mr Antinori.
  • Emirates and Qantas have also announced their shared baggage policy on certain routes for travel from 31 March 2013. To enable a more seamless experience as customers travel on the joint network, Qantas will move from a piece and weight system, to a weight system, for all international flights – excluding those to/from the Americas. As part of this alignment, Emirates will increase its pre-purchase excess baggage discount to 30 per cent Eligible Qantas Frequent Flyers, Qantas Club members and Skywards members will enjoy additional allowances when travelling across the joint network.

http://www.qantas.com.au/travel/airlines/media-releases/feb-2013/5497/global/en

 
La chiusura del volo daily QF5/6, SYD-SIN-FRA, e' anticipata da fine Ottobre al 15 Aprile.
Il volo era notoriamente in perdita. Dal 31 Marzo il mercato tedesco e' servito via Dubai, mentre in Europa l'unica destinazione ad essere servita con metallo QF e' LHR con un doppio daily A380.
 
Non ho capito... Qantas ha moltiplicato per 17 le prenotazioni per Milano?

Bisogna vedere da che numeri partiva, ovvio.
 
Qantas-Emirates deal gets final backing from Australia

Qantas and Emirates originally agreed to the tie-up in September

Qantas Airways has won a final approval from Australia's competition watchdog for its partnership with Emirates.

The alliance is seen as key to Qantas' attempts to turn around its loss-making international operations.

The Australian carrier's international division has been hurt by slowing demand from key markets, growing competition and higher fuel costs.

The alliance with Emirates, agreed last year, will see the two collaborate on pricing, sales and flight scheduling.

"Qantas is an Australian icon and the future of its international business is much brighter with this partnership," said Alan Joyce, chief executive of Qantas.

"Customers are already responding very strongly to the joint network that Qantas and Emirates have built, and to the frequent flyer benefits that extend across it, with a significant increase in bookings."

'Game-changing partnership'

Qantas has taken various steps to try and revive its international operations, including cancelling flights on loss-making routes, cutting jobs and restructuring some of its maintenance operations.

The efforts helped it narrow losses in the division A$91m ($95m; £63m) in the six months to the end of December, from A$262m a year earlier.

Many analysts have said that a successful alliance with Emirates may help it cut flights further and focus on more profitable routes instead.

They say that with Emirates flying to more than 70 destinations in Europe, any such move would be an easy one to make and would still help Qantas service its customers who fly to those destinations.

Qantas has already said that it will stop flights to Frankfurt.

Meanwhile, the alliance with Emirates will also see Qantas shift its hub for European flights to Dubai from Singapore.

Tim Clark, President of Emirates said the alliance will help connect Australian consumers to major markets.

"This is a truly game-changing partnership that brings together two of the world's best airlines," he said.

"Dubai is a leading global hub and through it, our two airlines will connect Australia to Europe, the UK and Northern Africa more smoothly than ever before."

Conditional approval

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) said it thought the benefits of the alliance outweighed the drawbacks.

"The ACCC considers that the alliance is likely to result in public benefits through enhanced products and service offerings by the airlines, and improved operating efficiency," said Rod Sims, chairman of the ACCC.

However, the watchdog gave approval for a period of just five years, half the time the airlines had originally bid for and made it conditional on the two carriers maintaining their pre-alliance capacity on routes between Australia and New Zealand amid concerns about reduced competition.

"The one exception is the trans-Tasman, where Qantas and Emirates compete on four routes which accounted for around 65% of total passenger capacity between Australia and New Zealand in the year to 30 June 2012," said Mr Sims.

"On these routes, the ACCC is concerned that Qantas and Emirates will have the ability and incentive to reduce or limit growth in capacity in order to raise airfares."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-21949473
 
Con il decollo poco fa del QF9 da MEL si inaugura oggi la Falcon Route via DXB, che sostituisce la Kangaroo route via SIN

Melbourne Dubai

Departs 16:25 (16:30 DEPARTED)
Arrives 23:25 (23:10 ESTIMATED)

Dubai London (Heathrow)

Departs 01:00 (Mon) 01:00 (Mon) ESTIMATED
Arrives 05:30 (Mon) 05:30 (Mon) ESTIMATED
 
Con il decollo poco fa del QF9 da MEL si inaugura oggi la Falcon Route via DXB, che sostituisce la Kangaroo route via SIN

Melbourne Dubai

Departs 16:25 (16:30 DEPARTED)
Arrives 23:25 (23:10 ESTIMATED)

Dubai London (Heathrow)

Departs 01:00 (Mon) 01:00 (Mon) ESTIMATED
Arrives 05:30 (Mon) 05:30 (Mon) ESTIMATED

Su sito Qantas il volo QF9 parte alle 15.25 da MEL e la ripartenza da DXB sempre all' 1 am, quindi la sosta sarà (credo) di 2 h e 30 min. Ora mi chiedo, ma i passeggeri restano in areo a DXB tutto quel tempo?
 
no, mica restano a bordo... una volta feci un volo sciagurato, da nap per ssh via frl... tempo di sosta dell'a/m circa 30min per fare rifornimento carburante... ci fecero scendere... al rientro in italia, idem... sosta a frl, nonostante dovesse prima transitare su nap, ma causa neve, andammo prima a frl... scendemmo dall'a/m per circa 30min, e rimanemmo al gate... figurati se adesso, con circa 2h e 30min di sosta, li lasciano in aereo... ;)

PS: con una delle migliori compagnie che abbia mai usato! MENPHIS AIR! ahahah grandissimi! avevano i pezzi di altri a/m per apparare il loro! ahahah ma ottimo servizio e volo perfetto sia all'andata sia al rientro, e nonostante turbolenze! :P
 
I primi effetti positivi per Qantas dovuti all'alleanza con Emirates non tardano ad arrivare.

"Qantas Airways Ltd. (QAN), Australia’s largest carrier, climbed the most in nearly seven years as profit doubled on a tie-up with Emirates and the cancellation of unprofitable routes to Frankfurt and London.The shares surged 14 percent on volumes almost four times the three-month average to close at A$1.40. That’s the biggest gain since Nov. 22, 2006. Pre-tax profit excluding one-time items jumped to A$192 million ($172 million) in the year ended June 30, from A$95 million a year earlier, the Sydney-based company said today, exceeding the A$76 million average of seven analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg."

Qui' tutto l'articolo con ulteriori dati operativi ed analisi:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-...ses-estimates-amid-challenge-from-virgin.html