From Qantas' Queen of the Skies being axed to the return of international leisure travel being pushed back again and again, it's been a rough year on the Australian travel industry. The lack of air traffic caused by the pandemic has led a number of airlines around the world to go under, with Virgin Australia being one of them, going into voluntary administration in April.
After going through a sale and restructuring process, Australia's second fiddle airline is making moves to bounce back, with the financial backing of bidding war winner Bain Capital. The airline's latest announcement showcases a number of these changes – many positive. There was one, however, which may strike fear into some business class passengers' hearts.
As part of its recovery plan, Virgin Australia will revert to an all Boeing 737 fleet. While this has been expected for some time, it has now been confirmed in an official statement.
In a devastating blow to Australia's business class connoisseurs, Virgin Australia will remove the ATRs, 777s, A330s, and A320s from its fleet.
This leaves 29 Boeing 737-800s on the books – jets which feature 2-2 business class configurations. While there are worthy planes, this will leave some business class passengers disappointed – especially as the axed A330s and 777s featured what many have called the best business class in the world (which came in a 1-2-1 configuration that gave direct aisle access to every passenger).
Of course, in the scheme of things, it's not the biggest thing to be complaining about. But as the last few months have shown, there's little some pointy end passengers (ourselves included) won't complain about.
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Tigerair will also be killed off "as there is not sufficient customer demand to support two carriers at this time" while Tigerair Australia’s Air Operator Certificate (AOC) will be retained to support optionality to operate an ultra-low-cost carrier "in the future when the domestic market can support it."
Virgin Australia's reasoning for the changes? Their current mission is to "overhaul the cost base, and simplify everything, starting with the fleet," the airline announced yesterday in a media release.
Virgin Australia also announced it would consolidate its footprint and move its corporate headquarters to 275 Grey Street in Brisbane’s Southbank (following a consolidation of its corporate offices in Sydney).
The airline also acknowledged that this stripped back fleet would not be sufficient once international travel returns as normal, and gave a couple of hints as to its plans for those developments.
"Long-haul international operations are an important part of the Virgin Australia business. However, given current international travel restrictions, the airline will continue to suspend flights to Los Angeles and Tokyo with the intention to recommence and grow long-haul flights when sufficient demand returns," Virgin announced.
"Customers will continue to have access to international markets through the airline’s codeshare partners."
Once demand for international travel returns, Executive Traveller reports, "Virgin will have an all-new international fleet, with Boeing 787 Dreamliners previously earmarked for both Asia and the USA."
These changes come as part of a six-point plan geared around overhauling the cost base, focussing on customer value, harnessing culture, investing in world-class digital and data technologies, creating a strong balance sheet and boosting jobs and future growth, which can be read in detail here.
Read Next
- Why A 'Leaner, Meaner' Virgin Australia Could Actually Benefit Consumers
- Aviation Experts Reveal What Virgin Australia Could Look Like In Five Year's Time
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The post Virgin Australia’s Latest Plan A Devastating Blow For Business Class Connoisseurs appeared first on DMARGE.
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