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An esteemed aviation authority has cautioned Australians to brace for consistently high airfare prices, even if tensions in the Middle East ease.
Keith Tonkin, who serves as Managing Director and Principal Consultant at Aviation Projects, predicts that Australians will face steeper costs when booking domestic flights as airlines strive to recover their financial setbacks.
“It feels reminiscent of the Covid era,” Tonkin shared with the Daily Mail. “Discussions revolve around remote work setups and reducing travel—not due to virus concerns this time, but these factors still influence how people organize their activities and connect with each other.”
Tonkin, a former Qantas and Royal Australian Air Force pilot, anticipates that more Australians will choose to explore destinations within Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific Islands, given the current instability of travel through the Gulf region.
Nonetheless, this increased interest in regional travel is expected to drive prices even higher.
‘We saw that too during Covid – people still want to travel, so if you can’t go overseas – and that’s not to say that all overseas destinations aren’t available – we might see those travel intentions change a little bit,’ he said.
Mr Tonkin said travellers should consider their need to travel, and which airline they’d opt to fly with, when looking at booking any arrangements over the coming months.
‘Take advantages of any discounts or airfare sales wherever you can… at the moment, it feels like those fares are going up and they might hold up for a while,’ he said.
Aviation expert Keith Tonkin warned surging domestic airfares could become the new normalÂ
He expects more Aussies will opt to travel around Australia, NZ and the Pacific IslandsÂ
‘The aviation industry will come back. It always does. People have an innate need and desire to travel the world so, we’ll see it come back, we’ll just be talking about higher airfares for sometime.’
It comes as Virgin Australia confirmed it will increase the price of domestic airfares by five per cent at midnight on Monday (March 23).
‘Costs across the aviation sector continue to rise, now significantly exacerbated by the situation in the Middle East,’ a Virgin spokesperson said in a statement.
‘We are making necessary fare adjustments to reflect these cost pressures.’
Australia’s national carrier Qantas also raised prices on its international flights earlier this month and said they will conduct fortnightly reviews into its domestic airfares.
However its budget airline, Jetstar, similarly increased airfares last week after the cost of jet fuel nearly doubled in just under a month.Â
The Daily Mail has contacted Jetstar and Qantas to confirm if any further price hikes are due.
Mr Tonkin said it was only ‘natural’ for the airlines to increase airfares in order to ‘preserve some sort of cost control and ideally some profitability.’
Virgin Australia will increase their domestic airfares by five per cent at midnight on Monday
However he warned airlines faced a tricky balancing act when choosing how much, and when, to introduce price hikes.
‘Theres a consequence to increasing fares too much as people won’t travel and then [they’re] losing the money altogether,’ he said.
It comes as Energy Minister Chris Bowen said more fuel could be released from Australia’s national reserve should the crisis in the Middle East continue.
While emphasising there was plenty of fuel available to get through April, Chris Bowen said additional releases from reserves were on the table.
‘Fuel suppliers will continue and are locked in and will continue to arrive,’ he told reporters in Brisbane on Friday.
But beyond late April, the situation was more uncertain and dependent on how international events panned out, Mr Bowen said.
Oil prices have soared and global supplies cut after Iran’s de-facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation against US-Israeli strikes.
One-fifth of the national reserve of petrol and diesel has already been released from emergency stockpiles, including 500 million litres going into regional areas.
Government subsidies will continue to Australia’s two remaining oil refineries, in Geelong and Brisbane, after six months of negotiations over the payments.