Air New Zealand cuts 20 per cent of its flights to Asia due to coronavirus outbreak

Air New Zealand cuts 20 per cent of its flights to Asia as the coronavirus outbreak causes a $72MILLION hit to the airline’s bottom line

  • Air New Zealand is slashing its flight capacity by almost 20 per cent in Asia 
  • Airline said few wanted to fly from Asia and even fewer wanted to travel there
  • Comes as spread of virus continues with first case reported in Latin America
  • Virus has reached every continent but Antarctica and infected 80,000 people

Air New Zealand is slashing capacity by almost 20 per cent in Asia to reduce the impact of the coronavirus on its bottom line.

The airline expects the impact of the virus on earnings to be in the range of $NZD35 million ($AUD34 million) to $NZD75 million ($AUD72 million) due to lower demand and capacity cuts.

An Air New Zealand spokesperson said fewer people are wanting to fly from Asia to New Zealand and even greater numbers don’t want to travel to the continent.

 

Air New Zealand has announced it is reducing its Asia capacity by 17 per cent until June because of reduced demand over coronavirus fears (stock image)

The airline is reducing its Asia capacity by 17 per cent until June, including cutting flights to Hong Kong and suspending Shanghai services until March and Seoul flights from March to June.

Pacific Islands’ demand remains strong but Air NZ is also reducing trans-Tasman flights by three per cent until May, mainly to Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.

The announcement came as South Korea and China each reported hundreds more cases of COVID-19 on Thursday.

South Korea reported 334 more cases, bringing its total to 1,595. Most of the new cases were in the country’s fourth-biggest city, Daegu, where the outbreak has hit hardest. 

China reported 433 new cases along with 29 additional deaths. Thursday’s updates bring mainland China’s totals to 78,497 cases, and 2,744 deaths.  

With Brazil on Wednesday confirming Latin America’s first case, the virus has reached every continent but Antarctica and infected more than 80,000 people. 

Passengers wearing face masks arrive at Perth International Airport on February 2. The continuing global spread of COVID-19 has for the first time caused more cases outside China than inside the country

Passengers wearing face masks arrive at Perth International Airport on February 2. The continuing global spread of COVID-19 has for the first time caused more cases outside China than inside the country

Global worries about the COVID-19 illness are multiplying, as the epidemic expanded geographically and for the first time caused more new cases outside China than inside the country. 

In Australia, a leading bio-security expert has warned the coronavirus may hit Australia harder than China because of the country’s ageing population.  

The flu-like virus, which spawned in Wuhan, China in December, is more severe in older people because their immune systems are weaker.

In Australia 16 per cent of the population are over 65, compared to just nine per cent in China.  

The government will decide on Thursday whether to extend its travel ban on Chinese visitors to Australia for another week, while possibly easing restrictions on international students.

Last week the government lifted the ban on Year 11 and 12 students coming in from China under strict rules, and at the time said it would consider a controlled opening for Chinese university students a week later.

CORONAVIRUS CASES IN AUSTRALIA: 25

NEW SOUTH WALES: 4  

January 25

  • Three men aged 43, 53, and 35 who had recently travelled to China contracted the disease.
  • Two flew in from Wuhan while the other arrived in Sydney from Shenzhen, south China.
  • They were treated in isolation at Westmead Hospital

January 27 

  • A 21-year-old woman is identified as the fourth person to test positive for the illness in NSW.
  • The woman, a student at UNSW, flew into Sydney International Airport on flight MU749 on January 23 and presented to the emergency department 24 hours later after developing flu-like symptoms. 

VICTORIA: 7

January 25

  • A Chinese national aged in his 50s becomes the first confirmed case of the coronavirus in Australia.
  • The man flew to Melbourne on China Southern flight CZ321 from Wuhan via Guangzhou on January 19.
  • He was quarantined at Monash Hospital in Clayton in Melbourne’s east.

January 29

  • A Victorian man in his 60s is diagnosed with the coronavirus.
  • He became unwell on January 23 – two days after returning from the Chinese city of Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak. 
  •  The man was confirmed as positive on January 29 and was subsequently seen by doctors at the Monash Medical Centre.

January 30

  • A woman in her 40s is found to have coronavirus. 
  • She was visiting from China and mostly spent time with her family.
  • She is being treated at Royal Melbourne Hospital.          

February 1

  • A woman in her 20s in Melbourne is found to have the virus 

 February 22 

  • Two passengers taken off the Diamond Princess cruise ship test positive
  • Third passenger taken off the cruise ship tests positive

QUEENSLAND: 9

January 29

  • Queensland confirms its first case after a 44-year-old Chinese national was diagnosed with the virus. He is being treated at Gold Coast University Hospital.

January 30

  • A 42-year-old Chinese woman who was travelling in the same Wuhan tour group as the 44-year-old man tests positive. She is in Gold Coast University Hospital in stable condition.  

February 4

  • An eight-year-old boy was diagnosed with coronavirus. He is also from the tour group where the other Queensland cases came from    

February 5  

  • A 37-year-old man, who was a member of a group of nine Chinese tourists in quarantine on the Gold Coast, also tested positive

February 6

  • A 37-year-old woman was diagnosed with coronavirus from the same travel group that flew to Queensland from Melbourne on January 27

February 21                                                                                                                                      

  • Two Queensland women, aged 54 and 55, tested positive for COVID-19 and will be flown to Brisbane for further treatment. 
  • A 57-year-old woman from Queensland also tested positive for the virus.   February 28                                                                                                                                          A 63-year-old woman was confirmed to have the virus after returning to the Gold Coast from Iran.

SOUTH AUSTRALIA: 3

February 1

  • A Chinese couple in their 60s who arrived in Adelaide from Wuhan to visit relatives are confirmed to have coronavirus.
  • A 24-year-old woman from South Australia was transferred to Royal Adelaide Hospital

WESTERN AUSTRALIA: 1

February 21

  • A 78-year-old man from Western Australia was transferred to Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital in Perth. On February 28, he was taken into intensive care in a ‘serious’ condition

DIAMOND PRINCESS CRUISE SHIP: 8

  • Of the 23 overall cases in Australia, eight contracted the disease on the Diamond Princess cruise ship, which had gone into quarantine in the Japanese port of Yokohama
  • They tested positive for the coronavirus after arriving at the Manigurr-ma Village Howard Springs facility in Darwin, and are now being treated in their home states

 

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