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Aviation in Australia

Aviation in Australia began in 1920 with the formation of Qantas, which became the flag carrier of Australia. The Australian National Airways (ANA) was the predominant domestic carrier from the mid-1930s to the early 1950s. After World War II, Qantas was nationalised and its domestic operations were transferred to Trans Australia Airlines (TAA) in 1946. The Two Airlines Policy was formally established in 1952 to ensure the viability of both airlines. However, ANA's leadership was quickly eroded by TAA, and it was acquired by Ansett Transport Industries in 1957. The duopoly continued for the next four decades. In the mid-1990s TAA was merged with Qantas and later privatised. Ansett collapsed in September 2001. In the following years, Virgin Australia became a challenger to Qantas. Both companies launched low-cost subsidiaries Jetstar and Tigerair Australia, respectively.

Total monthly arrivals to Australia since 1976
Melbourne Airport
Sydney Airport

Overseas flights from Australia to United Kingdom via the Eastern Hemisphere are known as the Kangaroo Route,[1] whereas flights via the Western Hemisphere are known as the Southern Cross Route. Qantas began international passenger flights in May 1935. In 1948, the first commercial flight from Australia to Africa was flown by Qantas, launching what is known as the Wallaby Route.[2][3] In 1954, the first flight from Australia to North America was completed, as a 60-passenger Qantas aircraft connected Sydney with San Francisco and Vancouver, having fuel stops at Fiji, Canton Island and Hawaii. In 1982, a Pan Am airplane first flew non-stop from Los Angeles to Sydney. A non-stop flight between Australia and Europe was first completed in March 2018 from Perth to London.

History edit

Until World War II edit

 
Air routes of Australia in 1925

In 1934, Qantas and Britain's Imperial Airways (a forerunner of British Airways) formed a new company, Qantas Empire Airways Limited (QEA),[4] which commenced operations in December 1934, flying between Brisbane and Darwin. QEA flew internationally from May 1935, when the service from Darwin was extended to Singapore, and Imperial Airways operated the rest of the service through to London.[5] Australian National Airways (ANA) was established in 1936 by a consortium of British-financed Australian shipowners.

Until World War II, Australia had been one of the world's leading centres of aviation. With its tiny population of about seven million, Australia ranked sixth in the world for scheduled air mileage, had 16 airlines, was growing at twice the world average, and had produced a number of prominent aviation pioneers, including Lawrence Hargrave, Harry Hawker, Bert Hinkler, Lawrence Wackett, the Reverend John Flynn, Sidney Cotton, Keith Virtue and Charles Kingsford Smith. Governments on both sides of politics, well aware of the immense stretches of uninhabitable desert that separated the small productive regions of Australia, regarded air transport as a matter of national importance. In the words of Arthur Brownlow Corbett, Director General of Civil Aviation:

A nation which refuses to use flying in its national life must necessarily today be a backward and defenceless nation.[6]

Air transport was encouraged both with direct subsidies and with mail contracts. Immediately before the start of the war, more than half of all airline passenger and freight miles were subsidised.

However, after 1939 and especially after Japan's invasion of the islands to the north in 1941, civil aviation was sacrificed to military needs. During the war, most of the Qantas fleet of ten was taken over by the Australian government for war service and enemy action and accidents destroyed half of the fleet.[7]

Post World War II edit

By the end of the Second World War, there were only nine domestic airlines remaining, eight smaller regional concerns and Australian National Airways (ANA), a conglomerate owned by British and Australian shipping interests which had a virtual monopoly on the major trunk routes and received 85% of all government air transport subsidies.

The Chifley Government's view was summed up by Minister for Air, Arthur Drakeford: "Where are the great pioneers of aviation? ..... We discover that one by one the small pioneer enterprises are disappearing from the register. It is the inevitable process of absorption by a monopoly." Air transport, the government believed, was primarily a public service, like hospitals, the railways or the post office. If there was to be a monopoly at all, then it should be one owned by the public and working in the public interest.

In August 1945, only two days after the end of World War II, the Australian parliament passed the Australian National Airways Bill, which set up the Australian National Airways Commission (ANAC) and charged it with the task of reconstructing the nation's air transport industry. In keeping with the Labor government's socialist leanings, the bill declared that licences of private operators would lapse for those routes that were adequately serviced by the national carrier. From this time on, it seemed, air transport in Australia would be a government monopoly. However, a legal challenge (Australian National Airways Pty Ltd v Commonwealth), backed by the Liberal opposition and business interests generally, was successful and in December 1945, the High Court ruled that the Commonwealth did not have the power to prevent the issue of airline licences to private companies. The government could set up an airline if it wished, but it could not legislate a monopoly. Much of the press objected strongly to the setting up of a public airline network, seeing it as a form of socialisation by stealth.

The bill was suitably amended to remove the monopoly provisions, and ANAC came into existence in February 1946. ANAC formed Trans Australia Airlines (TAA) in 1946, and nationalised Qantas in 1947. Qantas's domestic operations, in Queensland, were transferred to TAA, while Qantas continued as an international airline. Shortly later, QEA began its first services outside the British Empire, to Tokyo,[8] and services to Hong Kong began around the same time.

Two Airlines Policy edit

However, ANA's leadership in Australia's aviation was quickly being eroded by TAA, so in 1952, the Menzies Government formally established the "Two Airlines Policy", to ensure the viability of both major airlines, the government-owned TAA and the privately owned ANA. In reality, it ensured the survival of the private airline ANA.

Under the policy, only two airlines were allowed to operate flights between state capital cities and major regional city airports. The Two Airlines Policy was in fact a legal barrier to new entrants to the Australian aviation market. It restricted intercapital services to the two major domestic carriers. This anti-competitive arrangement ensured that they carried approximately the same number of passengers, charged the same fares and had similar fleet sizes and equipment.

Ivan Holyman, managing director of ANA and its main driving force, died in 1957. The five British shipping companies that owned the airline had been trying to get out for several years, and offered to sell out to the government, in order that ANA merge with TAA and some smaller airlines.[9] The government declined. Later that year, ANA was acquired by the much smaller Ansett Airways, and the duopoly would continue for the next four decades.

 
Qantas Airbus A380 taking off at Sydney Airport

Deregulation edit

Deregulation of aviation in Australia commenced in the late 1980s.

In 1986 Trans-Australia Airlines was renamed Australian Airlines,[10] which merged in September 1992 with Qantas. Qantas was gradually privatised between 1993 and 1997.[11][12][13] The legislation allowing privatisation requires Qantas to be at least 51% owned by Australian shareholders.

In 1988, the Australian Government formed the Federal Airports Corporation (FAC), placing 22 airports around the nation under its operational control.[citation needed] In April 1994, the Government announced that all airports operated by FAC would be privatised in several phases.[14]

Virgin Australia was launched as Virgin Blue in August 2000. The timing of Virgin Blue's entry into the Australian market was fortuitous as it was able to fill the vacuum created by the collapse of Ansett Australia in September 2001. In the following years, Virgin Australia became a challenger to Qantas. Both companies launched low-cost subsidiaries: Qantas formed Jetstar in 2003 and Virgin acquired Tigerair Australia in 2013.

Statistics edit

Top 30 routes by annual passenger numbers edit

Data retrieved from Department of Infrastructure, Regional Development and Cities[15]
Rank City 1 City 2 Distance (km) 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
1   Melbourne   Sydney 707 7,008,000 7,088,600 7,901,100 7,727,500 8,047,700 8,244,000 8,316,900 8,613,400 8,904,700 9,097,100
2   Brisbane   Sydney 752 4,306,500 4,295,800 4,397,500 4,406,000 4,390,700 4,425,100 4,448,100 4,476,200 4,658,100 4,736,300
3   Brisbane   Melbourne 1379 2,688,500 2,706,200 3,020,200 3,090,400 3,189,600 3,198,800 3,317,100 3,353,800 3,493,300 3,541,100
4   Gold Coast   Sydney 679 2,164,800 2,148,000 2,405,000 2,244,800 2,440,600 2,559,100 2,595,200 2,618,300 2,704,400 2,740,700
5   Adelaide   Melbourne 642 2,122,700 2,103,800 2,271,400 2,186,700 2,085,200 2,195,100 2,272,000 2,311,000 2,393,900 2,456,400
6   Melbourne   Perth 2705 1,772,200 1,724,900 1,736,400 1,855,900 2,130,700 2,290,700 2,160,700 2,138,900 2,072,900 2,033,200
7   Gold Coast   Melbourne 1328 1,673,500 1,615,800 1,767,600 1,671,300 1,790,700 1,675,400 1,754,000 1,812,300 1,966,100 2,012,600
8   Adelaide   Sydney 1167 1,589,100 1,600,200 1,785,700 1,722,700 1,751,200 1,751,900 1,813,000 1,831,500 1,872,000 1,898,300
9   Perth   Sydney 3285 1,493,200 1,465,100 1,622,700 1,731,700 1,811,400 1,800,400 1,798,900 1,760,900 1,753,700 1,716,500
10   Hobart   Melbourne 616 1,157,800 1,202,300 1,231,900 1,157,900 1,239,100 1,388,800 1,400,100 1,493,600 1,555,500 1,630,300
11   Brisbane   Cairns 1387 1,196,500 1,154,800 1,153,800 1,108,000 1,187,000 1,199,600 1,256,100 1,307,000 1,346,900 1,377,900
12   Canberra   Melbourne 470 1,068,500 1,093,800 1,038,000 1,065,200 1,003,100 994,500 972,300 984,200 1,026,100 1,133,000
13   Cairns   Sydney 1967 940,300 832,900 876,800 894,300 933,900 978,600 1,000,900 1,032,600 1,115,300 1,129,300
14   Brisbane   Perth 3615 683,400 718,000 755,100 867,500 951,500 1,017,700 1,062,000 1,007,800 984,100 969,100
15   Brisbane   Townsville 1110 968,700 942,600 941,100 977,400 994,200 957,500 948,200 965,300 976,600 960,200
16   Canberra   Sydney 237 959,500 1,021,800 1,096,200 1,069,100 1,053,200 1,027,600 968,200 946,800 959,400 949,200
17   Launceston   Melbourne 476 842,900 832,800 838,200 790,500 835,800 872,800 878,300 880,500 918,000 923,200
18   Adelaide   Brisbane 1621 660,300 637,000 717,100 679,800 729,200 747,500 776,700 792,800 830,300 849,600
19   Cairns   Melbourne 2305 482,200 389,800 451,100 504,800 581,700 677,600 711,800 770,600 823,400 841,300
20   Brisbane   Mackay 795 727,100 735,900 798,000 908,900 964,900 863,500 746,400 696,400 678,500 697,900
21   Hobart   Sydney 1038 458,700 490,300 502,800 472,800 477,900 517,200 536,400 546,300 616,600 655,900
22   Adelaide   Perth 2120 577,600 626,000 599,000 592,500 621,700 624,300 616,400 611,000 617,100 614,100
23   Brisbane   Canberra 954 609,500 604,500 612,700 620,500 605,400 583,000 560,200 558,200 576,100 594,300
24   Brisbane   Newcastle 613 529,300 564,300 579,100 582,200 591,800 583,700 570,300 543,700 574,000 590,700
25   Sunshine Coast   Sydney 835 477,600 446,700 460,300 475,100 463,300 464,600 464,100 481,800 539,800 582,700
26   Brisbane   Rockhampton 517 569,600 600,600 643,900 606,400 644,400 636,100 612,600 587,800 563,800 522,100
27   Melbourne   Sunshine Coast 1452 452,100 412,300 403,200 382,000 324,600 392,200 397,600 406,000 441,800 485,800
28   Melbourne   Newcastle 835 416,800 369,000 370,700 429,700 425,200 437,500 434,900 443,000 449,500 476,100
29   Karratha   Perth 1247 - 518,300 587,100 646,100 762,500 722,100 685,200 600,200 490,600 436,900
30   Brisbane   Darwin 2850 341,600 381,600 367,200 366,000 367,000 375,900 391,500 396,200 407,700 406,200

Busiest airports edit

Domestic Airport passenger numbers are calculated by the Department of Infrastructure and Transport and include passenger numbers from the major domestic airlines only; these being Qantas, Virgin Australia, Jetstar and Tiger Australia. Rex Airlines, QantasLink and similar airlines are considered to be regional airlines and are not included in these figures.

Monthly
Busiest Airports by Domestic Passenger Numbers
Month of March 2015[16]
Rank Airport State Total
Mar 2014
Total
Mar 2015
Monthly
Change %
1. Sydney Airport   New South Wales 2,154,200 2,209,600  2.6
2. Melbourne Airport   Victoria 1,974,700 2,055,400  4.1
3. Brisbane Airport   Queensland 1,402,700 1,390,600  0.9
4. Perth Airport   Western Australia 731,600 713,200  2.5
5. Adelaide Airport   South Australia 581,300 585,100  0.7
6. Gold Coast Airport   Queensland 398,100 400,000  0.5
7. Cairns Airport   Queensland 278,000 284,900  2.5
8. Canberra Airport   Australian Capital Territory 250,400 252,000  0.7
9. Hobart Airport   Tasmania 192,300 199,200  3.6
10. Darwin Airport   Northern Territory 128,300 125,800  1.9
Yearly
Busiest Airports by Domestic Passenger Numbers
FY 2016-2017[17]
Rank Airport State FY 2015-16 FY 2016-17 Change %
1 Sydney Airport   New South Wales 26,587,000 27,077,700  1.8
2 Melbourne Airport   Victoria 24,482,700 24,996,800  2.1
3 Brisbane Airport   Queensland 17,013,200 17,102,600  0.5
4 Perth Airport   Western Australia 8,285,900 8,029,500  3.1
5 Adelaide Airport   South Australia 6,922,000 7,049,200  1.8
6 Gold Coast Airport   Queensland 5,256,400 5,362,800  2.0
7 Cairns Airport   Queensland 4,141,800 4,283,300  3.4
8 Canberra Airport   Australian Capital Territory 2,816,000 2,932,800  4.1
9 Hobart Airport   Tasmania 2,312,900 2,440,800  5.5
10 Darwin Airport   Northern Territory 1,783,700 1,809,400  1.4

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Post war aviation 1945-1958". Qantas. Retrieved 27 April 2023.
  2. ^ Qantas celebrates 60 years of flying to South Africa, retrieved 24 April 2023
  3. ^ "Indian Ocean Route - Qantas to Fly Direct Australia|South Africa Services: Cocos Base Re-constructed". Flight: The Aircraft Engineer. IPC Transport Press Limited. 1952. p. 78.
  4. ^ . Our Company. Qantas. Archived from the original on 9 October 2006. Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  5. ^ . Our Company. Qantas. Archived from the original on 9 October 2006. Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  6. ^ . 12 May 2009. Archived from the original on 8 March 2010. Retrieved 28 July 2010.
  7. ^ . Our Company. Qantas. Archived from the original on 9 October 2006. Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  8. ^ . Our Company. Qantas. Archived from the original on 9 October 2006. Retrieved 16 December 2006.
  9. ^ Grant, J. R. A False Dawn? Australian National Airways Air Enthusiast magazine article July–August 1997 No.70 pp. 22–24
  10. ^ . Flight International. 143 (4362): 117. 24–30 March 1993. ISSN 0015-3710. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012.
  11. ^ The Hon R. Willis, Answer to a Question without Notice, House of Representatives Debates, 13 May 1993, p.775.
  12. ^ Commonwealth of Australia Budget Statements 1996–97, Budget Paper no. 3, p. 3-191.
  13. ^ Ian Thomas, '"Luck" played a key part in float success', Australian Financial Review, 31 July 1995.
  14. ^ Frost & Sullivan (25 April 2006). "Airport Privatisation". MarketResearch.com. Retrieved 20 July 2008.
  15. ^ Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics (23 March 2018). "Australian Domestic Aviation Activity Annual Publications". Retrieved 16 May 2018.
  16. ^ Australian Domestic Aviation Activity Monthly Publications - Monthly
  17. ^ Airport traffic data - Yearly

Bibliography edit

  • Grant, Jim. "From Theory to Production: Australian Aviation Development 1870 to 1939". Air Enthusiast, No. 83, September–October 1999, pp. 58–61. ISSN 0143-5450

aviation, australia, began, 1920, with, formation, qantas, which, became, flag, carrier, australia, australian, national, airways, predominant, domestic, carrier, from, 1930s, early, 1950s, after, world, qantas, nationalised, domestic, operations, were, transf. Aviation in Australia began in 1920 with the formation of Qantas which became the flag carrier of Australia The Australian National Airways ANA was the predominant domestic carrier from the mid 1930s to the early 1950s After World War II Qantas was nationalised and its domestic operations were transferred to Trans Australia Airlines TAA in 1946 The Two Airlines Policy was formally established in 1952 to ensure the viability of both airlines However ANA s leadership was quickly eroded by TAA and it was acquired by Ansett Transport Industries in 1957 The duopoly continued for the next four decades In the mid 1990s TAA was merged with Qantas and later privatised Ansett collapsed in September 2001 In the following years Virgin Australia became a challenger to Qantas Both companies launched low cost subsidiaries Jetstar and Tigerair Australia respectively Total monthly arrivals to Australia since 1976Melbourne AirportSydney AirportOverseas flights from Australia to United Kingdom via the Eastern Hemisphere are known as the Kangaroo Route 1 whereas flights via the Western Hemisphere are known as the Southern Cross Route Qantas began international passenger flights in May 1935 In 1948 the first commercial flight from Australia to Africa was flown by Qantas launching what is known as the Wallaby Route 2 3 In 1954 the first flight from Australia to North America was completed as a 60 passenger Qantas aircraft connected Sydney with San Francisco and Vancouver having fuel stops at Fiji Canton Island and Hawaii In 1982 a Pan Am airplane first flew non stop from Los Angeles to Sydney A non stop flight between Australia and Europe was first completed in March 2018 from Perth to London Contents 1 History 1 1 Until World War II 1 2 Post World War II 1 3 Two Airlines Policy 1 4 Deregulation 2 Statistics 2 1 Top 30 routes by annual passenger numbers 2 2 Busiest airports 3 See also 4 References 5 BibliographyHistory editUntil World War II edit nbsp Air routes of Australia in 1925In 1934 Qantas and Britain s Imperial Airways a forerunner of British Airways formed a new company Qantas Empire Airways Limited QEA 4 which commenced operations in December 1934 flying between Brisbane and Darwin QEA flew internationally from May 1935 when the service from Darwin was extended to Singapore and Imperial Airways operated the rest of the service through to London 5 Australian National Airways ANA was established in 1936 by a consortium of British financed Australian shipowners Until World War II Australia had been one of the world s leading centres of aviation With its tiny population of about seven million Australia ranked sixth in the world for scheduled air mileage had 16 airlines was growing at twice the world average and had produced a number of prominent aviation pioneers including Lawrence Hargrave Harry Hawker Bert Hinkler Lawrence Wackett the Reverend John Flynn Sidney Cotton Keith Virtue and Charles Kingsford Smith Governments on both sides of politics well aware of the immense stretches of uninhabitable desert that separated the small productive regions of Australia regarded air transport as a matter of national importance In the words of Arthur Brownlow Corbett Director General of Civil Aviation A nation which refuses to use flying in its national life must necessarily today be a backward and defenceless nation 6 Air transport was encouraged both with direct subsidies and with mail contracts Immediately before the start of the war more than half of all airline passenger and freight miles were subsidised However after 1939 and especially after Japan s invasion of the islands to the north in 1941 civil aviation was sacrificed to military needs During the war most of the Qantas fleet of ten was taken over by the Australian government for war service and enemy action and accidents destroyed half of the fleet 7 Post World War II edit By the end of the Second World War there were only nine domestic airlines remaining eight smaller regional concerns and Australian National Airways ANA a conglomerate owned by British and Australian shipping interests which had a virtual monopoly on the major trunk routes and received 85 of all government air transport subsidies The Chifley Government s view was summed up by Minister for Air Arthur Drakeford Where are the great pioneers of aviation We discover that one by one the small pioneer enterprises are disappearing from the register It is the inevitable process of absorption by a monopoly Air transport the government believed was primarily a public service like hospitals the railways or the post office If there was to be a monopoly at all then it should be one owned by the public and working in the public interest In August 1945 only two days after the end of World War II the Australian parliament passed the Australian National Airways Bill which set up the Australian National Airways Commission ANAC and charged it with the task of reconstructing the nation s air transport industry In keeping with the Labor government s socialist leanings the bill declared that licences of private operators would lapse for those routes that were adequately serviced by the national carrier From this time on it seemed air transport in Australia would be a government monopoly However a legal challenge Australian National Airways Pty Ltd v Commonwealth backed by the Liberal opposition and business interests generally was successful and in December 1945 the High Court ruled that the Commonwealth did not have the power to prevent the issue of airline licences to private companies The government could set up an airline if it wished but it could not legislate a monopoly Much of the press objected strongly to the setting up of a public airline network seeing it as a form of socialisation by stealth The bill was suitably amended to remove the monopoly provisions and ANAC came into existence in February 1946 ANAC formed Trans Australia Airlines TAA in 1946 and nationalised Qantas in 1947 Qantas s domestic operations in Queensland were transferred to TAA while Qantas continued as an international airline Shortly later QEA began its first services outside the British Empire to Tokyo 8 and services to Hong Kong began around the same time Two Airlines Policy edit Main article Two Airlines Policy However ANA s leadership in Australia s aviation was quickly being eroded by TAA so in 1952 the Menzies Government formally established the Two Airlines Policy to ensure the viability of both major airlines the government owned TAA and the privately owned ANA In reality it ensured the survival of the private airline ANA Under the policy only two airlines were allowed to operate flights between state capital cities and major regional city airports The Two Airlines Policy was in fact a legal barrier to new entrants to the Australian aviation market It restricted intercapital services to the two major domestic carriers This anti competitive arrangement ensured that they carried approximately the same number of passengers charged the same fares and had similar fleet sizes and equipment Ivan Holyman managing director of ANA and its main driving force died in 1957 The five British shipping companies that owned the airline had been trying to get out for several years and offered to sell out to the government in order that ANA merge with TAA and some smaller airlines 9 The government declined Later that year ANA was acquired by the much smaller Ansett Airways and the duopoly would continue for the next four decades nbsp Qantas Airbus A380 taking off at Sydney AirportDeregulation edit Deregulation of aviation in Australia commenced in the late 1980s In 1986 Trans Australia Airlines was renamed Australian Airlines 10 which merged in September 1992 with Qantas Qantas was gradually privatised between 1993 and 1997 11 12 13 The legislation allowing privatisation requires Qantas to be at least 51 owned by Australian shareholders In 1988 the Australian Government formed the Federal Airports Corporation FAC placing 22 airports around the nation under its operational control citation needed In April 1994 the Government announced that all airports operated by FAC would be privatised in several phases 14 Virgin Australia was launched as Virgin Blue in August 2000 The timing of Virgin Blue s entry into the Australian market was fortuitous as it was able to fill the vacuum created by the collapse of Ansett Australia in September 2001 In the following years Virgin Australia became a challenger to Qantas Both companies launched low cost subsidiaries Qantas formed Jetstar in 2003 and Virgin acquired Tigerair Australia in 2013 Statistics editTop 30 routes by annual passenger numbers edit Data retrieved from Department of Infrastructure Regional Development and Cities 15 Rank City 1 City 2 Distance km 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 20171 nbsp Melbourne nbsp Sydney 707 7 008 000 7 088 600 7 901 100 7 727 500 8 047 700 8 244 000 8 316 900 8 613 400 8 904 700 9 097 1002 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Sydney 752 4 306 500 4 295 800 4 397 500 4 406 000 4 390 700 4 425 100 4 448 100 4 476 200 4 658 100 4 736 3003 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Melbourne 1379 2 688 500 2 706 200 3 020 200 3 090 400 3 189 600 3 198 800 3 317 100 3 353 800 3 493 300 3 541 1004 nbsp Gold Coast nbsp Sydney 679 2 164 800 2 148 000 2 405 000 2 244 800 2 440 600 2 559 100 2 595 200 2 618 300 2 704 400 2 740 7005 nbsp Adelaide nbsp Melbourne 642 2 122 700 2 103 800 2 271 400 2 186 700 2 085 200 2 195 100 2 272 000 2 311 000 2 393 900 2 456 4006 nbsp Melbourne nbsp Perth 2705 1 772 200 1 724 900 1 736 400 1 855 900 2 130 700 2 290 700 2 160 700 2 138 900 2 072 900 2 033 2007 nbsp Gold Coast nbsp Melbourne 1328 1 673 500 1 615 800 1 767 600 1 671 300 1 790 700 1 675 400 1 754 000 1 812 300 1 966 100 2 012 6008 nbsp Adelaide nbsp Sydney 1167 1 589 100 1 600 200 1 785 700 1 722 700 1 751 200 1 751 900 1 813 000 1 831 500 1 872 000 1 898 3009 nbsp Perth nbsp Sydney 3285 1 493 200 1 465 100 1 622 700 1 731 700 1 811 400 1 800 400 1 798 900 1 760 900 1 753 700 1 716 50010 nbsp Hobart nbsp Melbourne 616 1 157 800 1 202 300 1 231 900 1 157 900 1 239 100 1 388 800 1 400 100 1 493 600 1 555 500 1 630 30011 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Cairns 1387 1 196 500 1 154 800 1 153 800 1 108 000 1 187 000 1 199 600 1 256 100 1 307 000 1 346 900 1 377 90012 nbsp Canberra nbsp Melbourne 470 1 068 500 1 093 800 1 038 000 1 065 200 1 003 100 994 500 972 300 984 200 1 026 100 1 133 00013 nbsp Cairns nbsp Sydney 1967 940 300 832 900 876 800 894 300 933 900 978 600 1 000 900 1 032 600 1 115 300 1 129 30014 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Perth 3615 683 400 718 000 755 100 867 500 951 500 1 017 700 1 062 000 1 007 800 984 100 969 10015 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Townsville 1110 968 700 942 600 941 100 977 400 994 200 957 500 948 200 965 300 976 600 960 20016 nbsp Canberra nbsp Sydney 237 959 500 1 021 800 1 096 200 1 069 100 1 053 200 1 027 600 968 200 946 800 959 400 949 20017 nbsp Launceston nbsp Melbourne 476 842 900 832 800 838 200 790 500 835 800 872 800 878 300 880 500 918 000 923 20018 nbsp Adelaide nbsp Brisbane 1621 660 300 637 000 717 100 679 800 729 200 747 500 776 700 792 800 830 300 849 60019 nbsp Cairns nbsp Melbourne 2305 482 200 389 800 451 100 504 800 581 700 677 600 711 800 770 600 823 400 841 30020 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Mackay 795 727 100 735 900 798 000 908 900 964 900 863 500 746 400 696 400 678 500 697 90021 nbsp Hobart nbsp Sydney 1038 458 700 490 300 502 800 472 800 477 900 517 200 536 400 546 300 616 600 655 90022 nbsp Adelaide nbsp Perth 2120 577 600 626 000 599 000 592 500 621 700 624 300 616 400 611 000 617 100 614 10023 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Canberra 954 609 500 604 500 612 700 620 500 605 400 583 000 560 200 558 200 576 100 594 30024 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Newcastle 613 529 300 564 300 579 100 582 200 591 800 583 700 570 300 543 700 574 000 590 70025 nbsp Sunshine Coast nbsp Sydney 835 477 600 446 700 460 300 475 100 463 300 464 600 464 100 481 800 539 800 582 70026 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Rockhampton 517 569 600 600 600 643 900 606 400 644 400 636 100 612 600 587 800 563 800 522 10027 nbsp Melbourne nbsp Sunshine Coast 1452 452 100 412 300 403 200 382 000 324 600 392 200 397 600 406 000 441 800 485 80028 nbsp Melbourne nbsp Newcastle 835 416 800 369 000 370 700 429 700 425 200 437 500 434 900 443 000 449 500 476 10029 nbsp Karratha nbsp Perth 1247 518 300 587 100 646 100 762 500 722 100 685 200 600 200 490 600 436 90030 nbsp Brisbane nbsp Darwin 2850 341 600 381 600 367 200 366 000 367 000 375 900 391 500 396 200 407 700 406 200Busiest airports edit Domestic Airport passenger numbers are calculated by the Department of Infrastructure and Transport and include passenger numbers from the major domestic airlines only these being Qantas Virgin Australia Jetstar and Tiger Australia Rex Airlines QantasLink and similar airlines are considered to be regional airlines and are not included in these figures MonthlyBusiest Airports by Domestic Passenger NumbersMonth of March 2015 16 Rank Airport State TotalMar 2014 TotalMar 2015 MonthlyChange 1 Sydney Airport nbsp New South Wales 2 154 200 2 209 600 nbsp 2 62 Melbourne Airport nbsp Victoria 1 974 700 2 055 400 nbsp 4 13 Brisbane Airport nbsp Queensland 1 402 700 1 390 600 nbsp 0 94 Perth Airport nbsp Western Australia 731 600 713 200 nbsp 2 55 Adelaide Airport nbsp South Australia 581 300 585 100 nbsp 0 76 Gold Coast Airport nbsp Queensland 398 100 400 000 nbsp 0 57 Cairns Airport nbsp Queensland 278 000 284 900 nbsp 2 58 Canberra Airport nbsp Australian Capital Territory 250 400 252 000 nbsp 0 79 Hobart Airport nbsp Tasmania 192 300 199 200 nbsp 3 610 Darwin Airport nbsp Northern Territory 128 300 125 800 nbsp 1 9YearlyBusiest Airports by Domestic Passenger NumbersFY 2016 2017 17 Rank Airport State FY 2015 16 FY 2016 17 Change 1 Sydney Airport nbsp New South Wales 26 587 000 27 077 700 nbsp 1 82 Melbourne Airport nbsp Victoria 24 482 700 24 996 800 nbsp 2 13 Brisbane Airport nbsp Queensland 17 013 200 17 102 600 nbsp 0 54 Perth Airport nbsp Western Australia 8 285 900 8 029 500 nbsp 3 15 Adelaide Airport nbsp South Australia 6 922 000 7 049 200 nbsp 1 86 Gold Coast Airport nbsp Queensland 5 256 400 5 362 800 nbsp 2 07 Cairns Airport nbsp Queensland 4 141 800 4 283 300 nbsp 3 48 Canberra Airport nbsp Australian Capital Territory 2 816 000 2 932 800 nbsp 4 19 Hobart Airport nbsp Tasmania 2 312 900 2 440 800 nbsp 5 510 Darwin Airport nbsp Northern Territory 1 783 700 1 809 400 nbsp 1 4See also edit1989 Australian pilots dispute List of Australian airportsReferences edit Post war aviation 1945 1958 Qantas Retrieved 27 April 2023 Qantas celebrates 60 years of flying to South Africa retrieved 24 April 2023 Indian Ocean Route Qantas to Fly Direct Australia South Africa Services Cocos Base Re constructed Flight The Aircraft Engineer IPC Transport Press Limited 1952 p 78 The Move to Brisbane Our Company Qantas Archived from the original on 9 October 2006 Retrieved 16 December 2006 Venturing Overseas Our Company Qantas Archived from the original on 9 October 2006 Retrieved 16 December 2006 ANAC Beginning of TAA 12 May 2009 Archived from the original on 8 March 2010 Retrieved 28 July 2010 The World at War Our Company Qantas Archived from the original on 9 October 2006 Retrieved 16 December 2006 Post War Expansion Our Company Qantas Archived from the original on 9 October 2006 Retrieved 16 December 2006 Grant J R A False Dawn Australian National Airways Air Enthusiast magazine article July August 1997 No 70 pp 22 24 World airline directory Qantas Airways Flight International 143 4362 117 24 30 March 1993 ISSN 0015 3710 Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 The Hon R Willis Answer to a Question without Notice House of Representatives Debates 13 May 1993 p 775 Commonwealth of Australia Budget Statements 1996 97 Budget Paper no 3 p 3 191 Ian Thomas Luck played a key part in float success Australian Financial Review 31 July 1995 Frost amp Sullivan 25 April 2006 Airport Privatisation MarketResearch com Retrieved 20 July 2008 Bureau of Infrastructure Transport and Regional Economics 23 March 2018 Australian Domestic Aviation Activity Annual Publications Retrieved 16 May 2018 Australian Domestic Aviation Activity Monthly Publications Monthly Airport traffic data YearlyBibliography editGrant Jim From Theory to Production Australian Aviation Development 1870 to 1939 Air Enthusiast No 83 September October 1999 pp 58 61 ISSN 0143 5450 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aviation in Australia amp oldid 1179456737, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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