Qantas hikes fares on international routes as fuel costs surge on Mideast conflict

Qantas Airways said on Tuesday it would hike fares ​on its international routes this week in response ‌to the surge in jet fuel costs due to the conflict in the Middle East.

The Australian flag carrier also said ​in a statement that it was considering adding ​capacity on its existing Europe routes in the ⁠coming months.

The U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has sent oil ​prices surging, upending global travel and sparking fears of a ​deep travel slump and the potential for the widespread grounding of planes.

Airfares on Asia-Europe routes have already spiked due to airspace ​closures and capacity constraints.

Air New Zealand, Qantas’s rival, ​also announced earlier in the day broad increases to ticket prices, ‌one ⁠of the first airlines to do so since the start of the war.

Qantas said in an emailed statement to Reuters that flights on its European routes were ​operating as scheduled ​and were ⁠more than 90% full in March, about 15 percentage points above typical levels ​for this time of year.

“More customers have ​also been ⁠choosing to travel to Europe via the United States, other Asian cities, and Johannesburg, connecting through Qantas’ partner ⁠airline ​network,” Qantas said.

“We are exploring options ​to redeploy capacity into Europe on existing routes in the coming months.”

Source:  Reuters
 

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