
Qantas to close Asian budget airline offshoot
SYDNEY - Australian airline Qantas said it will close its loss-making budget carrier Jetstar Asia, axing 500 Singapore-based jobs.
The low-cost subsidiary will cease operations on July 31 as part of a "strategic restructure", Qantas group chief executive Vanessa Hudson said.
Qantas is "incredibly proud" of the Jetstar Asia team, Hudson said in a statement.
"This is a very tough day for them. Despite their best efforts, we have seen some of Jetstar Asia's supplier costs increase by up to 200 percent, which has materially changed its cost base."
Passengers with cancelled flights on the Singapore-based regional carrier -- which flies to 16 Asian destinations -- will be offered refunds, Qantas said.
Jetstar Asia was expected to make an underlying loss of Aus$35 million (US$23 million) this financial year prior to the closure decision, according to Qantas, which owns 49 percent of the carrier.
The Asian regional carrier's 500 staff will be laid off and receive redundancy benefits as well as help finding new jobs, the Australian group said.
Jetstar Asia's 13 A320 aircraft will be progressively redeployed to Australia and New Zealand, Qantas said, creating more than 100 local jobs.
Shutting the carrier would deliver up to Aus$500 million (US$326 million) for Qantas to support the group's fleet renewal program, it said.
Qantas said the decision to shutter Jetstar Asia was taken together with the offshoot's 51-percent shareholder, Westbrook Investments.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

TimesLIVE
3 hours ago
- TimesLIVE
FIA assembly votes in favour of statute changes
Formula One's governing body approved statute changes on Thursday that critics say will make it harder to challenge FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem's bid for re-election. A spokesperson for the International Automobile Federation (FIA), whose world championships also include rallying and Formula E, said a 'resounding majority' voted in favour at the general assembly meeting in Macau. He gave no figures and there was no immediate reaction from Ben Sulayem, an Emirati who will stand for a second four-year term in December and is currently unopposed. The Paris-based FIA also groups national motoring associations and campaigns for road safety. Austria's Automobile Association earlier urged FIA members to vote against the proposed changes in a letter seen by Reuters before the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal this weekend. The unsigned letter emailed to the mobility section of the FIA's world council said the FIA risked lasting damage to its reputation. 'There is no urgency regarding these proposed changes, they risk further contributing to the erosion of the FIA's reputation for competent and transparent governance,' it added. 'It cannot be — and is not — a coincidence that changes relevant to the FIA's elections have been promoted by the FIA's leadership at the same time as the FIA's incumbent president has announced an intention to run in those elections. 'Where there is even a risk of these changes appearing to benefit the current FIA administration, and not the FIA itself, the changes should not be adopted.' Ben Sulayem told Reuters last month, when he confirmed he was standing, he welcomed competition in the name of democracy. Ben Sulayem recognised he had enemies but said he was confident of the support of a majority of FIA members. 'I only have to answer to my members, and they are happy. They are extremely happy,' he said. The former rally driver has been involved in several controversies since being elected in 2021 as the first FIA president from the Middle East. He has been at loggerheads with drivers as well as drawing criticism from FIA insiders, while some senior employees have left the organisation. Briton Robert Reid, a former close ally who quit as an FIA deputy president in April, wrote in his resignation statement of a 'fundamental breakdown in governance standards' at the governing body. Reid and Motorsport UK head David Richards had opposed other statute changes approved by the general assembly last December that they said limited the powers of audit and ethics committees.


Daily Maverick
4 hours ago
- Daily Maverick
UN nuclear watchdog says Iran in breach of obligations, Iran announces counter-measures
The U.N. nuclear watchdog's board of governors declared Iran in breach of its non-proliferation obligations on Thursday and Tehran announced counter-measures, as an Iranian official said a "friendly country" had warned it of a potential Israeli attack. U.S. and Iranian officials will hold a sixth round of talks on Tehran's accelerating uranium enrichment programme in Oman on Sunday, the Omani foreign minister said on Thursday. But security fears have risen since U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday American personnel were being moved out of the region because 'it could be a dangerous place' and that Tehran would not be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon. Trump has threatened to bomb Iran if the nuclear talks do not progress, and in an interview released on Wednesday said he had become less confident that Tehran would agree to stop enriching uranium. The Islamic Republic wants a lifting of the U.S. sanctions imposed on the country since 2018. The International Atomic Energy Agency's policy-making Board of Governors declared Iran in breach of its non-proliferation obligations for the first time in almost 20 years, raising the prospect of reporting it to the U.N. Security Council. The step is the culmination of several stand-offs between the Vienna-based IAEA and Iran since Trump pulled the U.S. out of a nuclear deal between Tehran and major powers in 2018 during his first term, after which that accord unravelled. An IAEA official said Iran had responded by informing the nuclear watchdog that it plans to open a new uranium enrichment facility. After the IAEA decision, the Israeli Foreign Ministry said Tehran's actions undermine the global Non-Proliferation Treaty and posed an imminent threat to regional and international security and stability. Iran is a signatory to the NPT while Israel is not and is believed to have the Middle East's sole nuclear arsenal. MARKET REACTION Markets absorbed the developments in a volatile Middle East. Oil prices eased on Thursday as the market assessed the situation, having surged more than 4% on Wednesday to their highest since early April. But shares in European airlines, travel companies and hotel chains were among the biggest fallers in morning trade as investors worried the heightened tensions would knock demand for travel and higher oil prices would add to costs. 'Clearly it is Iran that is at the centre of this and the possibility that you see a strike from the U.S. or Israel,' said Paul McNamara, a director of emerging market debt for investment firm GAM. 'There is a lot of scope for things to get a whole lot worse if we do see a military strike and a sustained attack.' Iran's response to the IAEA resolution was among several countermeasures being taken, Iranian state TV said. The IAEA official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Tehran had given no further details on the planned new enrichment sites, such as its location to enable monitoring by U.N. nuclear inspectors. Behrouz Kamalvandi, spokesperson for Iran's atomic energy organisation, told state TV that Tehran had informed the IAEA of two countermeasures including 'the upgrading of centrifuges in Fordow (enrichment plant) from first to sixth generation, which will significantly boost the production of enriched uranium'. Enrichment can be used to produce uranium for reactor fuel or, at higher levels of refinement, for atomic bombs. Iran says its nuclear energy programme is only for peaceful purposes. Reiterating Iran's stance that it will not abandon the right to enrichment as an NPT member, a senior Iranian official told Reuters that rising Middle East tensions served to 'influence Tehran to change its position about its nuclear rights'. 'POTENTIAL ISRAELI STRIKE' The Iranian official said a 'friendly' country had alerted Tehran to a potential strike on its nuclear sites by arch-adversary Israel and reiterated that the Islamic Republic would not abandon its commitment to enrichment. 'We don't want tensions and prefer diplomacy to resolve the (nuclear) issue, but our armed forces are fully ready to respond to any military strike,' the official said. Iranian state media reported that Iran's military had begun drills earlier than planned to focus on 'enemy movements'. Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer and Mossad head David Barnea will travel to Oman to meet U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff ahead of the U.S.-Iranian talks in another bid to clarify Israel's position, Israeli media reported on Thursday. The decision by Trump to remove some personnel from the region comes at a brittle and highly sensitive juncture in the oil-producing Middle East, where security has already been destabilised by the Gaza war between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas that began in October 2023. Oil prices initially rose after Trump's announcement but later eased. Foreign energy companies were continuing their operations as usual, a senior Iraqi official overseeing operations in southern oilfields told Reuters on Thursday. The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad advised American citizens on Thursday against travelling to Iraq, Iran's western neighbour. Foreign energy firms continue to operate normally in Iraq, a senior Iraqi official told Reuters. Bahrain's state oil firm Bapco Energies is monitoring the situation in the region and its operations are unaffected, it said on Thursday, after dependents of U.S. military personnel were advised to leave the country because of regional tensions.

IOL News
4 hours ago
- IOL News
Shuka Minerals secures final regulatory approval for Kabwe mine acquisition in Zambia
Shuka Minerals said on Thursday it had received final regulatory approval for the acquisition of Leopard Exploration and Mining (LEM), the Zambian company that owns the Kabwe Zinc Mine, marking a key step in the UK-listed firm's African growth strategy. Shuka Minerals said on Thursday it had received final regulatory approval for the acquisition of Leopard Exploration and Mining (LEM), the Zambian company that owns the Kabwe Zinc Mine, marking a key step in the UK-listed firm's African growth strategy. Shuka Minerals is a UK-based exploration and development company focused on mining opportunities across Africa. It has a secondary listing on the JSE. The approval from Zambia's Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC) clears the last regulatory hurdle for the 100% acquisition of LEM, first announced in December 2024. Shuka said it has also agreed terms for a £1.5 million (R37m) unsecured, non-dilutive funding facility to cover the remaining $1.35 million (R24m) cash consideration owed to LEM's vendors. The facility is subject to final due diligence and the execution of definitive agreements. Under an amended share purchase agreement, Shuka will issue 28.64 million new ordinary shares to settle the $3m share consideration component of the deal. The shares will be issued at 7.737 pence each - a 10% discount to an agreed reference price of 8.5965p - and will represent 29.99% of the company's enlarged share capital. In lieu of deferred shares, LEM will receive 2 million warrants exercisable at 12.5p per share, expiring at the end of 2027. The warrant terms are designed to prevent LEM's vendors from exceeding 29.99% of Shuka's total voting rights post-exercise. Completion of the transaction has now been extended to no later than June 30 to allow finalisation of funding and legal documentation. 'This is a huge milestone and one which the market, shareholders and all stakeholders in Shuka have been waiting for,' CEO Richard Lloyd said. 'We look forward to completing this acquisition and progressing both Kabwe and Rukwa to realise their full potential.'