Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Ian Thomas Senior Consultant, Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation Regional Aviation: Subsidise or Perish? A Dilemma.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Ian Thomas Senior Consultant, Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation Regional Aviation: Subsidise or Perish? A Dilemma."— Presentation transcript:

1 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Ian Thomas Senior Consultant, Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation Regional Aviation: Subsidise or Perish? A Dilemma for Government Policy

2 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Three shades of regional routes Economic Marginal Deregulated Self sustainable Economic regulation Qualified Sustainability UneconomicSubsidised Requires support Route 1: Commercial Route 2: Limited Route 3: Non-commercial

3 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 The Current Subsidy Models The States & Territories Queensland: Competitive tender WA: Tendering for non-jet routes Northern Territory: Licensing Federal Government RASS: Enroute Charges Rebate Scheme: Terms 5-year contract, $7m p.a. subsidy 5-year period. Monopoly access/growth targets. Subsidy on non-viable routes Route specific, negotiated subsidy Provided to 7operators; services 270 communities 30 non-Qantas operators

4 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Key Findings of Study ECRS means difference between viability, non viability of some regional operators Enroute costs:1-2% total costs; range from 20% to 54% Profit Before Tax All Airservices Australia charges: 2%-7% operator costs; 32%-101% PBT Services passing through major cities have higher level of Airservices charges due to tower costs

5 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 The Qantaslink Network: a national regional Operates jets, turboprops on mix of routes; complements QF, Jetstar Source: CAPA Analysis

6 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Qantaslink: by far strongest performer, but earnings still volatile Collapse of Ansett Jetstar entry; Assumes some QF routes 2006* *Results for the 6 months to December 31 2006 Source: Qantas, CAPA Q1 2006

7 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 The major non-Qantas Regional Operators; Marginalised but rebuilding Macair, Airnorth aligned with Qantas; Rex with Virgin Blue; Skywest non-aligned Source: CAPA Analysis

8 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Avgas prices escalate globally Source: US Department of Transportation Up by 50% in 2005; Some relief this year Peak

9 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 +40% YOY Taxes & Charges =13% Total Costs The cost crunch for the regionals: Profile of typical operator Fuel rises from 15%-25%+ airline costs; charges bite hard Source: CAPA Analysis

10 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Low-Cost Carriers spread to 23 regional routes; growth continues Focus on dense, tourism-related sectors connecting with the major cities Source: CAPA Analysis

11 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Jetstar and/or Virgin Blue compete with other airlines on 20 regional sectors Non-Qantas regional carriers challenge on: PER-Broome, SYD-Ballina Source: CAPA Analysis

12 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 LCCs dominate regional ports Average 70%+ capacity share of all regional destinations Source: CAPA Analysis

13 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Options for Service Development Option 1: Status Quo –Continuing subsidy arrangements; probably inevitable on uneconomic routes Option 2: Competitive Tenders –Hybrid model, contracting services with strings attached; satisfies competition legislation Option 3: Risk Sharing - “Win win” outcome –Highly focused, localised solution –Opportunity for innovation, reduced dependence on state/federal support –Local authority and/or airport participation –Potential for public/private partnerships (takes many forms)

14 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Summary 1)Air services critical to regional economic development, tourism; bring disproportionate benefits 2)Differentiation in approach to commercial, non- commercial (eg Community Service Obligation) routes 3)Where necessary, subsidies maintained on a transparent basis; tenders with commercial overlay 4)Public/private cooperation should be sought where possible (eg Rex model, WA) 5)Policy challenge: to balance social service needs with private sector opportunity

15 BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Thank you


Download ppt "BTRE Transport Colloquium 15 June 2006 Ian Thomas Senior Consultant, Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation Regional Aviation: Subsidise or Perish? A Dilemma."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google