Rice is grown on 416,000 hectares across Europe and total production amounts to 2.8 million tonnes per year
The move by Emirates and Qantas to extend their cornerstone partnership for another five years will enable customers and frequent flyers of both airlines to access an expansive joint network and help speed up the recovery of international travel.
In a joint statement, both carriers said the deal provides Emirates customers access to over 55 Australian destinations that the UAE carrier does not fly to while Qantas customers are able to fly on Emirates to Dubai and access over 50 cities in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa, that Qantas does not fly to.
The agreement, signalling the return to normalcy of air travel after a protracted period of curbs and border closure, was signed by Emirates President Tim Clark and Qantas Group CEO Alan Joyce at the International Air Transport Association Annual General Meeting in Boston.
The statement said both carriers have existing approvals from regulators to operate a joint business until March 2023.
“Qantas and Emirates will seek re-authorisation from relevant regulators, including the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, to continue the core elements of the partnership including coordination of pricing, schedules, sales and tourism marketing on approved routes until 2028. The deal includes an option to renew for another five years beyond that,” it said.
Together, both airlines are making millions of reward seats available for frequent flyers to access more than 100 destinations using their Qantas Points or Skywards Miles, which many have been stockpiling throughout the pandemic.
Clark said the extension of Emirates partnership with Qantas is testament to its success. “It also reflects our commitment to ensure customers travelling to and from Australia, a market which we have served for 25 years, continue to have the best connections and frequent flyer benefits. Despite the challenges of the past 18 months, today’s announcement reinforces that Emirates is here for the long-haul.”
“As borders re-open, we look forward to restoring our Australian flight schedules including our popular A380 services, and to welcoming customers to experience our best-in-class partnership for many more years to come,” Emirates CEO said.
Joyce said the agreement marks the continuation of one of the most significant bilateral partnerships in aviation. “We called it ‘seismic’ when it launched in 2013 and it has been, especially in terms of what it’s meant for over 13 million people who have travelled on flights that form part of the deal.
“The premise of our partnership with Emirates has always been that no airline can fly everywhere but combined we can fly to most of the places our joint customers want to travel to. And that we treat each other’s customers as our own,” said Joyce.
Since 2013, more than 13 million passengers have travelled on the joint network, travelling more than 87 billon kilometres.
On average more than 13,000 Emirates passengers have travelled on Qantas’ domestic and regional services within Australia each month.
— issacjohn@khaleejtimes.com
Rice is grown on 416,000 hectares across Europe and total production amounts to 2.8 million tonnes per year
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