Aviation in Australia began in 1920 with the formation of Qantas, which became the flag carrier of Australia. The Australian National Airways (ANA) was the predominant domestic carrier from the mid-1930s to the early 1950s. After World War II, Qantas was nationalised and its domestic operations were transferred to Trans Australia Airlines (TAA) in 1946. The Two Airlines Policy was formally established in 1952 to ensure the viability of both airlines. However, ANA's leadership was quickly eroded by TAA, and it was acquired by Ansett Transport Industries in 1957. The duopoly continued for the next four decades. In the mid-1990s TAA was merged with Qantas and later privatised. Ansett collapsed in September 2001. In the following years, Virgin Australia became a challenger to Qantas. Both companies launched low-cost subsidiaries Jetstar and Tigerair Australia, respectively.
Overseas flights from Australia to United Kingdom via the Eastern Hemisphere are known as the Kangaroo Route, [1] whereas flights via the Western Hemisphere are known as the Southern Cross Route. Qantas began international passenger flights in May 1935. In 1948, the first commercial flight from Australia to Africa was flown by Qantas, launching what is known as the Wallaby Route. [2] [3] In 1954, the first flight from Australia to North America was completed, as a 60-passenger Qantas aircraft connected Sydney with San Francisco and Vancouver, having fuel stops at Fiji, Canton Island and Hawaii. In 1982, a Pan Am airplane first flew non-stop from Los Angeles to Sydney. A non-stop flight between Australia and Europe was first completed in March 2018 from Perth to London.
In 1934, Qantas and Britain's Imperial Airways (a forerunner of British Airways) formed a new company, Qantas Empire Airways Limited (QEA), [4] which commenced operations in December 1934, flying between Brisbane and Darwin. QEA flew internationally from May 1935, when the service from Darwin was extended to Singapore, and Imperial Airways operated the rest of the service through to London. [5] Australian National Airways (ANA) was established in 1936 by a consortium of British-financed Australian shipowners.
Until World War II, Australia had been one of the world's leading centres of aviation. With its tiny population of about seven million, Australia ranked sixth in the world for scheduled air mileage, had 16 airlines, was growing at twice the world average, and had produced a number of prominent aviation pioneers, including Lawrence Hargrave, Harry Hawker, Bert Hinkler, Lawrence Wackett, the Reverend John Flynn, Sidney Cotton, Keith Virtue and Charles Kingsford Smith. Governments on both sides of politics, well aware of the immense stretches of uninhabitable desert that separated the small productive regions of Australia, regarded air transport as a matter of national importance. In the words of Arthur Brownlow Corbett, Director General of Civil Aviation:
A nation which refuses to use flying in its national life must necessarily today be a backward and defenceless nation. [6]
Air transport was encouraged both with direct subsidies and with mail contracts. Immediately before the start of the war, more than half of all airline passenger and freight miles were subsidised.
However, after 1939 and especially after Japan's invasion of the islands to the north in 1941, civil aviation was sacrificed to military needs. During the war, most of the Qantas fleet of ten was taken over by the Australian government for war service and enemy action and accidents destroyed half of the fleet. [7]
By the end of the Second World War, there were only nine domestic airlines remaining, eight smaller regional concerns and Australian National Airways (ANA), a conglomerate owned by British and Australian shipping interests which had a virtual monopoly on the major trunk routes and received 85% of all government air transport subsidies.
The Chifley Government's view was summed up by Minister for Air, Arthur Drakeford: "Where are the great pioneers of aviation? ..... We discover that one by one the small pioneer enterprises are disappearing from the register. It is the inevitable process of absorption by a monopoly." Air transport, the government believed, was primarily a public service, like hospitals, the railways or the post office. If there was to be a monopoly at all, then it should be one owned by the public and working in the public interest.
In August 1945, only two days after the end of World War II, the Australian parliament passed the Australian National Airways Bill, which set up the Australian National Airways Commission (ANAC) and charged it with the task of reconstructing the nation's air transport industry. In keeping with the Labor government's socialist leanings, the bill declared that licences of private operators would lapse for those routes that were adequately serviced by the national carrier. From this time on, it seemed, air transport in Australia would be a government monopoly. However, a legal challenge ( Australian National Airways Pty Ltd v Commonwealth ), backed by the Liberal opposition and business interests generally, was successful and in December 1945, the High Court ruled that the Commonwealth did not have the power to prevent the issue of airline licences to private companies. The government could set up an airline if it wished, but it could not legislate a monopoly. Much of the press objected strongly to the setting up of a public airline network, seeing it as a form of socialisation by stealth.
The bill was suitably amended to remove the monopoly provisions, and ANAC came into existence in February 1946. ANAC formed Trans Australia Airlines (TAA) in 1946, and nationalised Qantas in 1947. Qantas's domestic operations, in Queensland, were transferred to TAA, while Qantas continued as an international airline. Shortly later, QEA began its first services outside the British Empire, to Tokyo, [8] and services to Hong Kong began around the same time.
However, ANA's leadership in Australia's aviation was quickly being eroded by TAA, so in 1952, the Menzies Government formally established the "Two Airlines Policy", to ensure the viability of both major airlines, the government-owned TAA and the privately owned ANA. In reality, it ensured the survival of the private airline ANA.
Under the policy, only two airlines were allowed to operate flights between state capital cities and major regional city airports. The Two Airlines Policy was in fact a legal barrier to new entrants to the Australian aviation market. It restricted intercapital services to the two major domestic carriers. This anti-competitive arrangement ensured that they carried approximately the same number of passengers, charged the same fares and had similar fleet sizes and equipment.
Ivan Holyman, managing director of ANA and its main driving force, died in 1957. The five British shipping companies that owned the airline had been trying to get out for several years, and offered to sell out to the government, in order that ANA merge with TAA and some smaller airlines. [9] The government declined. Later that year, ANA was acquired by the much smaller Ansett Airways, and the duopoly would continue for the next four decades.
Deregulation of aviation in Australia commenced in the late 1980s.
In 1986 Trans-Australia Airlines was renamed Australian Airlines, [10] which merged in September 1992 with Qantas. Qantas was gradually privatised between 1993 and 1997. [11] [12] [13] The legislation allowing privatisation requires Qantas to be at least 51% owned by Australian shareholders.
In 1988, the Australian Government formed the Federal Airports Corporation (FAC), placing 22 airports around the nation under its operational control.[ citation needed ] In April 1994, the Government announced that all airports operated by FAC would be privatised in several phases. [14]
Virgin Australia was launched as Virgin Blue in August 2000. The timing of Virgin Blue's entry into the Australian market was fortuitous as it was able to fill the vacuum created by the collapse of Ansett Australia in September 2001. In the following years, Virgin Australia became a challenger to Qantas. Both companies launched low-cost subsidiaries: Qantas formed Jetstar in 2003 and Virgin acquired Tigerair Australia in 2013.
Rank | City 1 | City 2 | Distance (km) | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Melbourne | Sydney | 707 | 7,008,000 | 7,088,600 | 7,901,100 | 7,727,500 | 8,047,700 | 8,244,000 | 8,316,900 | 8,613,400 | 8,904,700 | 9,097,100 |
2 | Brisbane | Sydney | 752 | 4,306,500 | 4,295,800 | 4,397,500 | 4,406,000 | 4,390,700 | 4,425,100 | 4,448,100 | 4,476,200 | 4,658,100 | 4,736,300 |
3 | Brisbane | Melbourne | 1379 | 2,688,500 | 2,706,200 | 3,020,200 | 3,090,400 | 3,189,600 | 3,198,800 | 3,317,100 | 3,353,800 | 3,493,300 | 3,541,100 |
4 | Gold Coast | Sydney | 679 | 2,164,800 | 2,148,000 | 2,405,000 | 2,244,800 | 2,440,600 | 2,559,100 | 2,595,200 | 2,618,300 | 2,704,400 | 2,740,700 |
5 | Adelaide | Melbourne | 642 | 2,122,700 | 2,103,800 | 2,271,400 | 2,186,700 | 2,085,200 | 2,195,100 | 2,272,000 | 2,311,000 | 2,393,900 | 2,456,400 |
6 | Melbourne | Perth | 2705 | 1,772,200 | 1,724,900 | 1,736,400 | 1,855,900 | 2,130,700 | 2,290,700 | 2,160,700 | 2,138,900 | 2,072,900 | 2,033,200 |
7 | Gold Coast | Melbourne | 1328 | 1,673,500 | 1,615,800 | 1,767,600 | 1,671,300 | 1,790,700 | 1,675,400 | 1,754,000 | 1,812,300 | 1,966,100 | 2,012,600 |
8 | Adelaide | Sydney | 1167 | 1,589,100 | 1,600,200 | 1,785,700 | 1,722,700 | 1,751,200 | 1,751,900 | 1,813,000 | 1,831,500 | 1,872,000 | 1,898,300 |
9 | Perth | Sydney | 3285 | 1,493,200 | 1,465,100 | 1,622,700 | 1,731,700 | 1,811,400 | 1,800,400 | 1,798,900 | 1,760,900 | 1,753,700 | 1,716,500 |
10 | Hobart | Melbourne | 616 | 1,157,800 | 1,202,300 | 1,231,900 | 1,157,900 | 1,239,100 | 1,388,800 | 1,400,100 | 1,493,600 | 1,555,500 | 1,630,300 |
11 | Brisbane | Cairns | 1387 | 1,196,500 | 1,154,800 | 1,153,800 | 1,108,000 | 1,187,000 | 1,199,600 | 1,256,100 | 1,307,000 | 1,346,900 | 1,377,900 |
12 | Canberra | Melbourne | 470 | 1,068,500 | 1,093,800 | 1,038,000 | 1,065,200 | 1,003,100 | 994,500 | 972,300 | 984,200 | 1,026,100 | 1,133,000 |
13 | Cairns | Sydney | 1967 | 940,300 | 832,900 | 876,800 | 894,300 | 933,900 | 978,600 | 1,000,900 | 1,032,600 | 1,115,300 | 1,129,300 |
14 | Brisbane | Perth | 3615 | 683,400 | 718,000 | 755,100 | 867,500 | 951,500 | 1,017,700 | 1,062,000 | 1,007,800 | 984,100 | 969,100 |
15 | Brisbane | Townsville | 1110 | 968,700 | 942,600 | 941,100 | 977,400 | 994,200 | 957,500 | 948,200 | 965,300 | 976,600 | 960,200 |
16 | Canberra | Sydney | 237 | 959,500 | 1,021,800 | 1,096,200 | 1,069,100 | 1,053,200 | 1,027,600 | 968,200 | 946,800 | 959,400 | 949,200 |
17 | Launceston | Melbourne | 476 | 842,900 | 832,800 | 838,200 | 790,500 | 835,800 | 872,800 | 878,300 | 880,500 | 918,000 | 923,200 |
18 | Adelaide | Brisbane | 1621 | 660,300 | 637,000 | 717,100 | 679,800 | 729,200 | 747,500 | 776,700 | 792,800 | 830,300 | 849,600 |
19 | Cairns | Melbourne | 2305 | 482,200 | 389,800 | 451,100 | 504,800 | 581,700 | 677,600 | 711,800 | 770,600 | 823,400 | 841,300 |
20 | Brisbane | Mackay | 795 | 727,100 | 735,900 | 798,000 | 908,900 | 964,900 | 863,500 | 746,400 | 696,400 | 678,500 | 697,900 |
21 | Hobart | Sydney | 1038 | 458,700 | 490,300 | 502,800 | 472,800 | 477,900 | 517,200 | 536,400 | 546,300 | 616,600 | 655,900 |
22 | Adelaide | Perth | 2120 | 577,600 | 626,000 | 599,000 | 592,500 | 621,700 | 624,300 | 616,400 | 611,000 | 617,100 | 614,100 |
23 | Brisbane | Canberra | 954 | 609,500 | 604,500 | 612,700 | 620,500 | 605,400 | 583,000 | 560,200 | 558,200 | 576,100 | 594,300 |
24 | Brisbane | Newcastle | 613 | 529,300 | 564,300 | 579,100 | 582,200 | 591,800 | 583,700 | 570,300 | 543,700 | 574,000 | 590,700 |
25 | Sunshine Coast | Sydney | 835 | 477,600 | 446,700 | 460,300 | 475,100 | 463,300 | 464,600 | 464,100 | 481,800 | 539,800 | 582,700 |
26 | Brisbane | Rockhampton | 517 | 569,600 | 600,600 | 643,900 | 606,400 | 644,400 | 636,100 | 612,600 | 587,800 | 563,800 | 522,100 |
27 | Melbourne | Sunshine Coast | 1452 | 452,100 | 412,300 | 403,200 | 382,000 | 324,600 | 392,200 | 397,600 | 406,000 | 441,800 | 485,800 |
28 | Melbourne | Newcastle | 835 | 416,800 | 369,000 | 370,700 | 429,700 | 425,200 | 437,500 | 434,900 | 443,000 | 449,500 | 476,100 |
29 | Karratha | Perth | 1247 | - | 518,300 | 587,100 | 646,100 | 762,500 | 722,100 | 685,200 | 600,200 | 490,600 | 436,900 |
30 | Brisbane | Darwin | 2850 | 341,600 | 381,600 | 367,200 | 366,000 | 367,000 | 375,900 | 391,500 | 396,200 | 407,700 | 406,200 |
Domestic Airport passenger numbers are calculated by the Department of Infrastructure and Transport and include passenger numbers from the major domestic airlines only; these being Qantas, Virgin Australia, Jetstar and Tiger Australia. Rex Airlines, QantasLink and similar airlines are considered to be regional airlines and are not included in these figures.
Rank | Airport | State | Total Mar 2014 | Total Mar 2015 | Monthly Change % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Sydney Airport | New South Wales | 2,154,200 | 2,209,600 | 2.6 |
2. | Melbourne Airport | Victoria | 1,974,700 | 2,055,400 | 4.1 |
3. | Brisbane Airport | Queensland | 1,402,700 | 1,390,600 | 0.9 |
4. | Perth Airport | Western Australia | 731,600 | 713,200 | 2.5 |
5. | Adelaide Airport | South Australia | 581,300 | 585,100 | 0.7 |
6. | Gold Coast Airport | Queensland | 398,100 | 400,000 | 0.5 |
7. | Cairns Airport | Queensland | 278,000 | 284,900 | 2.5 |
8. | Canberra Airport | Australian Capital Territory | 250,400 | 252,000 | 0.7 |
9. | Hobart Airport | Tasmania | 192,300 | 199,200 | 3.6 |
10. | Darwin Airport | Northern Territory | 128,300 | 125,800 | 1.9 |
Rank | Airport | State | FY 2015-16 | FY 2016-17 | Change % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sydney Airport | New South Wales | 26,587,000 | 27,077,700 | 1.8 |
2 | Melbourne Airport | Victoria | 24,482,700 | 24,996,800 | 2.1 |
3 | Brisbane Airport | Queensland | 17,013,200 | 17,102,600 | 0.5 |
4 | Perth Airport | Western Australia | 8,285,900 | 8,029,500 | 3.1 |
5 | Adelaide Airport | South Australia | 6,922,000 | 7,049,200 | 1.8 |
6 | Gold Coast Airport | Queensland | 5,256,400 | 5,362,800 | 2.0 |
7 | Cairns Airport | Queensland | 4,141,800 | 4,283,300 | 3.4 |
8 | Canberra Airport | Australian Capital Territory | 2,816,000 | 2,932,800 | 4.1 |
9 | Hobart Airport | Tasmania | 2,312,900 | 2,440,800 | 5.5 |
10 | Darwin Airport | Northern Territory | 1,783,700 | 1,809,400 | 1.4 |
Qantas Airways Limited is the flag carrier of Australia. It is the largest airline by fleet size, international flights, and international destinations in Australia and Oceania. Qantas is the world's third-oldest continuously operating airline, being founded in November 1920. Qantas is a founding member of the Oneworld airline alliance.
Trans Australia Airlines (TAA), renamed Australian Airlines in 1986, was one of the two major Australian domestic airlines between its inception in 1946 and its merger with Qantas in September 1992. As a result of the "COBRA" project, the entire airline was rebranded Qantas about a year later with tickets stating in small print "Australian Airlines Limited trading as Qantas Airways Limited" until the adoption of a single Air Operator Certificate a few years later. At that point, the entire airline was officially renamed "Qantas Airways Limited" continuing the name and livery of the parent company with the only change being the change of by-line from "The Spirit of Australia" to "The Australian Airline" under the window line with the existing "Qantas" title appearing above.
Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport is an international airport in Sydney, Australia, located 8 km (5 mi) south of the Sydney central business district, in the suburb of Mascot. The airport is owned by Sydney Airport Holdings. It is the primary airport serving Sydney and is a primary hub for Qantas, as well as a secondary hub for Virgin Australia and Jetstar, and a focus city for Air New Zealand. Situated next to Botany Bay, the airport has three runways. Sydney Kingsford Int'l Airport covers 907 hectares of land.
Melbourne Airport, is the primary international and domestic airport serving the city of Melbourne and Greater Victoria. It is the second busiest airport in Australia. Sometimes called Tullamarine Airport by locals, the airport operates 24/7 and has on-site parking, world-class shopping and dining. The airport opened in 1970 and replaced Essendon Airport. Melbourne Airport is the main international airport of the four airports serving the Melbourne metropolitan area, the other international airport being Avalon Airport.
Ansett Australia was a major Australian airline group, based in Melbourne, Victoria. The airline flew domestically within Australia and from the 1990s to destinations in Asia. After operating for 65 years, the airline was placed into administration in 2001 following a financial collapse and subsequent organised liquidation in 2002, subject to deed of company arrangement. The last flight touched down on 5 March 2002.
Cairns Airport is an international airport in Cairns, Queensland, Australia. Formerly operated by the Cairns Port Authority, the airport was sold by the Queensland Government in December 2008 to a private consortium. It is the seventh busiest airport in Australia. The airport is located 2.3 nautical miles north northwest of Cairns or 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) north of the Cairns central business district, in the suburb of Aeroglen. The airport lies between Mount Whitfield to the west and Trinity Bay to the east.
Perth Airport is an international, domestic and general aviation airport serving Perth, the capital city of Western Australia.
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Hobart Airport is an international airport located in Cambridge, 17 km (11 mi) north-east of the Hobart CBD. It is the major and fastest growing passenger airport in Tasmania.
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Sir Reginald Myles Ansett KBE was an Australian businessman and aviator. He was best known for founding Ansett Transport Industries, which owned one of Australia's two leading domestic airlines between 1957 and 2001. He also established a number of other business enterprises including Ansett Pioneer coachlines, Ansett Freight Express, Ansair coachbuilders, Gateway Hotels, Diners Club Australia, Biro Bic Australia and the ATV-0 television station in Melbourne and TVQ-0 in Brisbane which later became part of Network Ten. ATI also bought out Avis Rent a Car and had a 49% interest in Associated Securities Limited (ASL). In late 1979, mainly due to the collapse of ASL, Ansett lost control of the company to Peter Abeles of TNT and Rupert Murdoch of News Corporation who became joint managing directors.
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Mackay Airport located in South Mackay, Queensland, Australia is a major Australian regional airport that services the city of Mackay, with flights to the cities of Brisbane, Rockhampton, Townsville, Hamilton Island, Cairns, Sunshine Coast and Melbourne. In the year ending 30 June 2012, the airport handled 969,900 passengers making it the 14th busiest airport in Australia.
Australian National Airways (ANA) was Australia's predominant aerial carrier from the mid-1930s to the early 1950s.
Burnie Airport, also called Burnie Wynyard Airport or Wynyard Airport, is a regional airport located adjacent to the town of Wynyard, about 17 kilometres (11 mi) west from Burnie, Tasmania, Australia. Formally named the Wynyard Aerodrome, the first official opening occurred on 26 February 1934. The Burnie Airport is majority owned by the Burnie City Council.
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The Two Airlines Policy was a policy of the Government of Australia from the late 1940s to the 1990s. Under the policy, only two airlines were allowed to operate flights between state capital cities and between capitals and nominated regional centres. The Two Airlines Policy was a legal barrier to new entrants to the Australian aviation market. It restricted intercapital services to the two major domestic carriers. This anti-competitive arrangement ensured that they carried approximately the same number of passengers, charged the same fares and had similar fleet sizes and equipment.
Lester Joseph Brain, AO, AFC was a pioneer Australian aviator and airline executive. Born in New South Wales, he trained with the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) before joining Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services (Qantas) as a pilot in 1924. He was awarded the Air Force Cross in 1929, after locating the lost aircraft Kookaburra in northern Australia. Having risen to Chief Pilot at Qantas by 1930, he was appointed Flying Operations Manager in 1938. As a member of the RAAF reserve, Brain coordinated his airline's support for the Australian military during World War II. He earned a King's Commendation for his rescue efforts during an air raid on Broome, Western Australia, in 1942, and was promoted to wing commander in 1944.
Qantas is Australia's largest airline. Qantas was founded in Winton, Queensland, on 16 November 1920 as Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services Limited by Paul McGinness, Sir Hudson Fysh and Sir Fergus McMaster, the latter of whom was chairman. Arthur Baird was employed as a chief aircraft engineer. McGinness left QANTAS for other interests, and Hudson Fysh remained with the company as General Manager & Managing Director. He retired as Sir Hudson Fysh KBE DFC, Chairman of QANTAS in 1966.