By Jamie Freed
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia’s Qantas Airways Ltd
“Qantas every decade has literally reinvented itself,” Chief Executive Alan Joyce said in a recorded message. “That is why it has survived as long as it has.”
The airline, founded in Australia’s outback as Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services Ltd (Qantas) in 1920, is the world’s third-oldest operating carrier behind Dutch airline KLM
Qantas’ centenary will include a 100-minute low-level flyover of Sydney’s famous harbour at sunset on Monday evening for 100 employees as well as frequent flyers.
At the start of the year, the airline had been in a strong financial position and was expecting to order up to 12 Airbus SE
It has since announced cuts to nearly 30% of its workforce and grounded the bulk of its fleet. It doesn’t expect a return to most international travel until the second half of 2021 as Australia’s borders remain largely closed.
The domestic market outlook is brighter as state borders begin to reopen, with the airline expecting to return to as much as 50% of normal capacity by Christmas.
Joyce said he was also optimistic the airline’s plans for non-stop Sydney-London flights would be back on the table as its financial position improved.
“We think the business case for that is going to be even better in a post-COVID world,” he said.
The airline has one of the world’s best safety records, highlighted in the 1988 film Rain Man, where an autistic character played by Dustin Hoffman says “Qantas never crashed”.
That is not entirely accurate given some accidents in its earlier years, but the Australian airline has not had a fatal crash since 1951, before it began flying jets.
(Reporting by Jamie Freed; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)