A Qantas Boeing 737-800 takes off from Sydney's Kingsford Smith airport on November 1, 2019. Photo: AFP / Peter Parks

Australia’s Qantas is cutting 6,000 staff and grounding 100 planes for up to one year in a US$10 billion cost-cutting blitz in response to the Covid-19 crisis, the airline announced Thursday.

CEO Alan Joyce said the three-year plan to save Australia’s flag carrier from “the biggest crisis our industry has ever faced” would also see more than half the company’s remaining 23,000 staff remain on leave for months.

“This year was supposed to be one of celebration for Qantas. It’s our centenary,” Joyce said in a statement. “Clearly, it is not turning out as planned.”

The coronavirus pandemic had already forced Qantas to cancel nearly all its international flights until at least October and slash domestic routes.

While domestic travel is beginning to pick up as most Australian regions have successfully contained the epidemic, the country’s international borders are expected to remain closed to most passenger traffic until next year.

And a recent surge in new Covid-19 cases in Melbourne, Australia’s second-biggest city, has served as a reminder that the pandemic remains a threat.

“We have to position ourselves for several years where revenues will be much lower. And that means becoming a smaller airline in the short-term,” Joyce said in unveiling the “post-Covid recovery plan.”

In addition to the A$15 billion in cost-cutting, the plan includes raising up to A$1.9 billion ($1.3 billion) in equity.

The company also announced it would extend the contract of Joyce, Australia’s highest-paid CEO, until the completion of the plan.

Unions slam move

The 6,000 job losses will hit both Qantas and its budget subsidiary Jetstar, while the company hopes half of the 15,000 staff placed on leave since March will be back at work by the end of the year, Joyce said. 

He acknowledged the recovery plan’s “huge impact on thousands of our people,” but said “the collapse in billions of dollars in revenue leaves us little choice.”

Prime Minister Scott Morrison, whose government has spent billions trying to mitigate the economic impact of the pandemic, called the Qantas job cuts “heartbreaking.”

“These are hard days, Australia. They’re very hard days,” he said during a press conference.

The Australian Council of Trade Unions slammed the move and called on Morrison to extend the “JobKeeper” payments program that helps employers maintain workers during the crisis to the airline’s staff.

“If it’s good enough to secure Alan Joyce’s job, why isn’t it good enough to reverse these decisions, sit down with unions, ensure the federal government extends JobKeeper and save these jobs,” ACTU president Michele O’Neil said.

Qantas grounded about 150 aircraft in March, including most of its wide-bodied planes, and 100 of those will remain out of service for up to one year, including all the company’s double-decker A380s, it said Thursday.

It also deferred new orders for Airbus A321neo and Boeing 787-9 Dreamliners.

In addition to a gradual recovery of domestic flights, which Joyce said should be up to 40% of pre-Covid levels in July, there are hopes for a limited resumption of international flights this year between Australia and neighboring New Zealand, which has also successfully contained the disease.

Australia’s second full-service airline, Virgin Australia, went into voluntary administration in late April.

Two US-based investment companies have put in rival bids to rescue that airline.

AFP