
Newcastle Airport's transformation is a golden opportunity for region
Newcastle Airport has come a long way since commercial flights began operating out of a tin shed in 1948.
It is not among the signature rural or remote airfields that provide limited, but essential, services for emergency, flight training, charter flights and industry. Newcastle Airport instead services a catchment of more than 1.1 million, connecting 1.2 million passengers a year to capital cities, regional centres and tourism hotspots. It directly supports more than 5700 local jobs and generates $1 billion in economic impact.
With scale comes complexity and risk, and the airport has a corporate structure, board and a big balance sheet. The reporting that readers have seen provides insights into governance and risk management frameworks in action.
As a government-owned asset, the airport also reports to councils under frameworks mandated by the Local Government Act. Aviation is one of the most regulated sectors in Australia, bringing heavy compliance and reporting obligations. Add requirements under the Corporations Act, Newcastle Airport is not a business that can avoid transparency and accountability: to shareholders, markets, regulators or the public.
As the airport expands, so do the obligations, revenue and operational costs, requiring more ambitious investment to maintain standards and competitiveness. More flights to more destinations, more competition on airfares, more freight options for NSW suppliers, more jobs, and the option to avoid driving to Sydney or risk a domestic connection to another city for an international flight. Newcastle Airport is advanced in plans to be the airport we deserve, with investment in an international runway and terminal. This week, direct flights to Perth were announced, providing one-stop links to London and Europe.
No different to strategies progressed by most major airports, the airport is investing in property development that diversifies services and income. A 2023 Deloitte Access Economics report shows employment and economic contribution from Australian airport precincts eclipsing that of core aviation activities. Even land owners near Newcastle Airport get the opportunity, as complementary development proposals are pursued.
Air freight is also an economic driver, comprising 13 per cent of Australian exports. We expect the airport to review opportunities to build this, as they have in partnership with the Joint Organisation of Councils in the proposal for an air cargo terminal.
The region has much more at stake in the success of the airport than just securing that coveted flight to Singapore or the US, made possible by airport upgrades. We are a $91 billion economy entering structural adjustment as the contribution of coal declines, with 55,000 jobs at risk over the next 15 years. These government figures are not modelled on demand for coal. They reflect the supply-side hard baked into our future, including dates for the closure of coal-fired power stations and planning approvals for mines. You can hear the urgency from Upper Hunter mayors as they join advocacy for investment in the airport as part of the solution.
When developments in the airport precinct, international upgrades and a cargo terminal are realised, these collectively will replace more than 16 per cent of the predicted jobs deficit. This is not a game for our region. Real jobs, communities and economic security are at risk.
The committee is advocating hard with government and business for focus and investment, including the airport, positioning the region as grown-up, unified, professional and a sure bet. But the expression of local politics on airport matters shows that narrower interests are at play. In an own goal for the Hunter, this has bled into federal politics, with the Opposition threatening to air the matter in Senate Estimates. This is damaging negotiations on airport deals to secure the partnerships we need. The entire region, not just Newcastle, has an interest in the success of the airport.
With the new terminal opening within months, now is the time to back-in one of the region's most important economic engines. Efforts should be focused on how to increase the feasibility of this generational opportunity and maximise benefits for Hunter residents, businesses and the economy.
Newcastle Airport has come a long way since commercial flights began operating out of a tin shed in 1948.
It is not among the signature rural or remote airfields that provide limited, but essential, services for emergency, flight training, charter flights and industry. Newcastle Airport instead services a catchment of more than 1.1 million, connecting 1.2 million passengers a year to capital cities, regional centres and tourism hotspots. It directly supports more than 5700 local jobs and generates $1 billion in economic impact.
With scale comes complexity and risk, and the airport has a corporate structure, board and a big balance sheet. The reporting that readers have seen provides insights into governance and risk management frameworks in action.
As a government-owned asset, the airport also reports to councils under frameworks mandated by the Local Government Act. Aviation is one of the most regulated sectors in Australia, bringing heavy compliance and reporting obligations. Add requirements under the Corporations Act, Newcastle Airport is not a business that can avoid transparency and accountability: to shareholders, markets, regulators or the public.
As the airport expands, so do the obligations, revenue and operational costs, requiring more ambitious investment to maintain standards and competitiveness. More flights to more destinations, more competition on airfares, more freight options for NSW suppliers, more jobs, and the option to avoid driving to Sydney or risk a domestic connection to another city for an international flight. Newcastle Airport is advanced in plans to be the airport we deserve, with investment in an international runway and terminal. This week, direct flights to Perth were announced, providing one-stop links to London and Europe.
No different to strategies progressed by most major airports, the airport is investing in property development that diversifies services and income. A 2023 Deloitte Access Economics report shows employment and economic contribution from Australian airport precincts eclipsing that of core aviation activities. Even land owners near Newcastle Airport get the opportunity, as complementary development proposals are pursued.
Air freight is also an economic driver, comprising 13 per cent of Australian exports. We expect the airport to review opportunities to build this, as they have in partnership with the Joint Organisation of Councils in the proposal for an air cargo terminal.
The region has much more at stake in the success of the airport than just securing that coveted flight to Singapore or the US, made possible by airport upgrades. We are a $91 billion economy entering structural adjustment as the contribution of coal declines, with 55,000 jobs at risk over the next 15 years. These government figures are not modelled on demand for coal. They reflect the supply-side hard baked into our future, including dates for the closure of coal-fired power stations and planning approvals for mines. You can hear the urgency from Upper Hunter mayors as they join advocacy for investment in the airport as part of the solution.
When developments in the airport precinct, international upgrades and a cargo terminal are realised, these collectively will replace more than 16 per cent of the predicted jobs deficit. This is not a game for our region. Real jobs, communities and economic security are at risk.
The committee is advocating hard with government and business for focus and investment, including the airport, positioning the region as grown-up, unified, professional and a sure bet. But the expression of local politics on airport matters shows that narrower interests are at play. In an own goal for the Hunter, this has bled into federal politics, with the Opposition threatening to air the matter in Senate Estimates. This is damaging negotiations on airport deals to secure the partnerships we need. The entire region, not just Newcastle, has an interest in the success of the airport.
With the new terminal opening within months, now is the time to back-in one of the region's most important economic engines. Efforts should be focused on how to increase the feasibility of this generational opportunity and maximise benefits for Hunter residents, businesses and the economy.
Newcastle Airport has come a long way since commercial flights began operating out of a tin shed in 1948.
It is not among the signature rural or remote airfields that provide limited, but essential, services for emergency, flight training, charter flights and industry. Newcastle Airport instead services a catchment of more than 1.1 million, connecting 1.2 million passengers a year to capital cities, regional centres and tourism hotspots. It directly supports more than 5700 local jobs and generates $1 billion in economic impact.
With scale comes complexity and risk, and the airport has a corporate structure, board and a big balance sheet. The reporting that readers have seen provides insights into governance and risk management frameworks in action.
As a government-owned asset, the airport also reports to councils under frameworks mandated by the Local Government Act. Aviation is one of the most regulated sectors in Australia, bringing heavy compliance and reporting obligations. Add requirements under the Corporations Act, Newcastle Airport is not a business that can avoid transparency and accountability: to shareholders, markets, regulators or the public.
As the airport expands, so do the obligations, revenue and operational costs, requiring more ambitious investment to maintain standards and competitiveness. More flights to more destinations, more competition on airfares, more freight options for NSW suppliers, more jobs, and the option to avoid driving to Sydney or risk a domestic connection to another city for an international flight. Newcastle Airport is advanced in plans to be the airport we deserve, with investment in an international runway and terminal. This week, direct flights to Perth were announced, providing one-stop links to London and Europe.
No different to strategies progressed by most major airports, the airport is investing in property development that diversifies services and income. A 2023 Deloitte Access Economics report shows employment and economic contribution from Australian airport precincts eclipsing that of core aviation activities. Even land owners near Newcastle Airport get the opportunity, as complementary development proposals are pursued.
Air freight is also an economic driver, comprising 13 per cent of Australian exports. We expect the airport to review opportunities to build this, as they have in partnership with the Joint Organisation of Councils in the proposal for an air cargo terminal.
The region has much more at stake in the success of the airport than just securing that coveted flight to Singapore or the US, made possible by airport upgrades. We are a $91 billion economy entering structural adjustment as the contribution of coal declines, with 55,000 jobs at risk over the next 15 years. These government figures are not modelled on demand for coal. They reflect the supply-side hard baked into our future, including dates for the closure of coal-fired power stations and planning approvals for mines. You can hear the urgency from Upper Hunter mayors as they join advocacy for investment in the airport as part of the solution.
When developments in the airport precinct, international upgrades and a cargo terminal are realised, these collectively will replace more than 16 per cent of the predicted jobs deficit. This is not a game for our region. Real jobs, communities and economic security are at risk.
The committee is advocating hard with government and business for focus and investment, including the airport, positioning the region as grown-up, unified, professional and a sure bet. But the expression of local politics on airport matters shows that narrower interests are at play. In an own goal for the Hunter, this has bled into federal politics, with the Opposition threatening to air the matter in Senate Estimates. This is damaging negotiations on airport deals to secure the partnerships we need. The entire region, not just Newcastle, has an interest in the success of the airport.
With the new terminal opening within months, now is the time to back-in one of the region's most important economic engines. Efforts should be focused on how to increase the feasibility of this generational opportunity and maximise benefits for Hunter residents, businesses and the economy.
Newcastle Airport has come a long way since commercial flights began operating out of a tin shed in 1948.
It is not among the signature rural or remote airfields that provide limited, but essential, services for emergency, flight training, charter flights and industry. Newcastle Airport instead services a catchment of more than 1.1 million, connecting 1.2 million passengers a year to capital cities, regional centres and tourism hotspots. It directly supports more than 5700 local jobs and generates $1 billion in economic impact.
With scale comes complexity and risk, and the airport has a corporate structure, board and a big balance sheet. The reporting that readers have seen provides insights into governance and risk management frameworks in action.
As a government-owned asset, the airport also reports to councils under frameworks mandated by the Local Government Act. Aviation is one of the most regulated sectors in Australia, bringing heavy compliance and reporting obligations. Add requirements under the Corporations Act, Newcastle Airport is not a business that can avoid transparency and accountability: to shareholders, markets, regulators or the public.
As the airport expands, so do the obligations, revenue and operational costs, requiring more ambitious investment to maintain standards and competitiveness. More flights to more destinations, more competition on airfares, more freight options for NSW suppliers, more jobs, and the option to avoid driving to Sydney or risk a domestic connection to another city for an international flight. Newcastle Airport is advanced in plans to be the airport we deserve, with investment in an international runway and terminal. This week, direct flights to Perth were announced, providing one-stop links to London and Europe.
No different to strategies progressed by most major airports, the airport is investing in property development that diversifies services and income. A 2023 Deloitte Access Economics report shows employment and economic contribution from Australian airport precincts eclipsing that of core aviation activities. Even land owners near Newcastle Airport get the opportunity, as complementary development proposals are pursued.
Air freight is also an economic driver, comprising 13 per cent of Australian exports. We expect the airport to review opportunities to build this, as they have in partnership with the Joint Organisation of Councils in the proposal for an air cargo terminal.
The region has much more at stake in the success of the airport than just securing that coveted flight to Singapore or the US, made possible by airport upgrades. We are a $91 billion economy entering structural adjustment as the contribution of coal declines, with 55,000 jobs at risk over the next 15 years. These government figures are not modelled on demand for coal. They reflect the supply-side hard baked into our future, including dates for the closure of coal-fired power stations and planning approvals for mines. You can hear the urgency from Upper Hunter mayors as they join advocacy for investment in the airport as part of the solution.
When developments in the airport precinct, international upgrades and a cargo terminal are realised, these collectively will replace more than 16 per cent of the predicted jobs deficit. This is not a game for our region. Real jobs, communities and economic security are at risk.
The committee is advocating hard with government and business for focus and investment, including the airport, positioning the region as grown-up, unified, professional and a sure bet. But the expression of local politics on airport matters shows that narrower interests are at play. In an own goal for the Hunter, this has bled into federal politics, with the Opposition threatening to air the matter in Senate Estimates. This is damaging negotiations on airport deals to secure the partnerships we need. The entire region, not just Newcastle, has an interest in the success of the airport.
With the new terminal opening within months, now is the time to back-in one of the region's most important economic engines. Efforts should be focused on how to increase the feasibility of this generational opportunity and maximise benefits for Hunter residents, businesses and the economy.
Hashtags

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

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
This company wants to dethrone Google, but does it have a shot?
As the nature of the internet evolves from something we explore with our thumbs and mouse clicks to something we talk to, and which talks back, a fierce fight for the future of search is under way. At the Google I/O conference last week the incumbent web giant announced 100 different AI innovations to demonstrate how ready it and its Gemini chatbot are for the future. But 60 kilometres down the road from the conference, a much smaller company is working to beat Google in the race to dominating the AI search market. Dmitry Shevelenko, chief business officer at the self-styled AI-powered answer engine Perplexity, said Google was too big to pivot away from traditional search, and it's too bogged down in advertising. 'They built the world's most lucrative business, but it's predicated on getting you to click on certain links. And that behaviour of link clicking, especially on commercial queries, it's just going to become less relevant in the future of the internet,' he said. 'So aligning with your users, as opposed to with advertisers, that business model challenge is where Google is really going to operate with two hands tied behind its back.' Perplexity's main product is an answer machine that navigates the web to find responses to your queries. The company was founded in 2022 by four academics who had computer science experience at OpenAI and Google, and it has received funding from investors, including Nvidia and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. Australia is a priority market for Perplexity, which plans to grow its local user base by partnering with major Australian businesses. It has finalised a deal for the first of these partnerships, to be announced in the coming month. Shevelenko said the company had followed a similar strategy in Japan, Korea, Germany and other countries, where overall traffic had increased by as much as 10 times following the initial partnership. 'And if there are things we need to do to make the product work better in Australia, if there's certain parts of our web index that are under-covered, we'll be very nimble and quick to adapt and react there,' he said.

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
This company wants to dethrone Google, but does it have a shot?
As the nature of the internet evolves from something we explore with our thumbs and mouse clicks to something we talk to, and which talks back, a fierce fight for the future of search is under way. At the Google I/O conference last week the incumbent web giant announced 100 different AI innovations to demonstrate how ready it and its Gemini chatbot are for the future. But 60 kilometres down the road from the conference, a much smaller company is working to beat Google in the race to dominating the AI search market. Dmitry Shevelenko, chief business officer at the self-styled AI-powered answer engine Perplexity, said Google was too big to pivot away from traditional search, and it's too bogged down in advertising. 'They built the world's most lucrative business, but it's predicated on getting you to click on certain links. And that behaviour of link clicking, especially on commercial queries, it's just going to become less relevant in the future of the internet,' he said. 'So aligning with your users, as opposed to with advertisers, that business model challenge is where Google is really going to operate with two hands tied behind its back.' Perplexity's main product is an answer machine that navigates the web to find responses to your queries. The company was founded in 2022 by four academics who had computer science experience at OpenAI and Google, and it has received funding from investors, including Nvidia and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. Australia is a priority market for Perplexity, which plans to grow its local user base by partnering with major Australian businesses. It has finalised a deal for the first of these partnerships, to be announced in the coming month. Shevelenko said the company had followed a similar strategy in Japan, Korea, Germany and other countries, where overall traffic had increased by as much as 10 times following the initial partnership. 'And if there are things we need to do to make the product work better in Australia, if there's certain parts of our web index that are under-covered, we'll be very nimble and quick to adapt and react there,' he said.


Perth Now
2 hours ago
- Perth Now
Aussies search for pet-friendly getaway
Australia has one of the highest rates of pet ownership in the world so it should be no surprise pet-friendly holidays are on the rise across the nation. According to the RSPCA, almost 70 per cent of Australian households have an estimated 28 million pets, and many Australians are looking for the perfect getaway with their furry companions. New data from TripAdvisor reveals Australians are increasingly shaping their travel plans around their dogs and heading to pet-friendly destinations. Holiday-makers searching for dog-friendly restaurants is up about 10 per cent compared to the previous period in 2024 and searches for pet-friendly accommodation labelled 'pets allowed' increased 22 per cent in early 2025. The most pet-friendly destinations in Australia were Rye (Victoria), Rainbow Beach, (Qld), Mudgee (NSW), Robe (SA) and Dunsborough (WA). New data from TripAdvisor reveals Australians are increasingly shaping their travel plans around their dogs and heading to pet-friendly destinations. Credit: Supplied TripAdvisor and My Dog have embraced the trend and teamed up to launch a new co-branded digital hub to connect Australians with pet-friendly communities. The hub uses TripAdvisor's online platform and mobile app to help pet owners find dog-friendly travel spots and encourages businesses to recognise the benefits of becoming a pet-friendly destination. Users can find city guides featuring pet-friendly travel tips and attractions, as well as an AI trip builder to build a pet-friendly trip with itineraries guided by traveller tips and reviews. TripAdvisor sales director Scott Wegener said the hub was designed to provide information in one place and inspire travellers to visit pet friendly communities throughout Australia. Pet owner Stacey Pinchbeck likes to holiday with her family and two golden retrievers Dolly and Darcy, saying the new app will make it a lot easier to plan trips and find pet-friendly accommodation. Photo: Supplied. Credit: Supplied Mr Wegener said they had seen an increase in demand and more people filtering pet-friendly on their platform. 'Almost 30 per cent of all accommodation listed on the site is classified as pet friendly, he said. 'There's roughly around 20,000 pet friendly accommodation providers throughout Australia that pet owners have access to and probably don't realise.' He said while people probably had an expectation that the accommodation would be more rural or beachside, there were a lot of inner city properties, as well as five star hotels, that were pet friendly. 'It's definitely growing and the beauty is the types of accommodation that offers pet friendly is a mix,' he said. 'Australia has one of the highest percentages of pet ownership in the world and our latest research indicates that more than 50 per cent of those pet owners in Australia plan to travel with their pets in the next 12 months.' Pet owners Lynden and Stacey Pinchbeck like to holiday with their baby and baby and two golden retrievers. Photo: Supplied. Credit: Supplied Stacey Pinchbeck, 37, owns two golden retrievers named Dolly and Darcy that are a big part of her little family. She likes to take them away on family trips with her husband Lynden and baby, so friends or family members are not burdened with looking after her pets. She said it was stressful finding accommodation providers that would allow them to take two dogs aged five and 18 months, as well as find places to eat with and walk the dogs. 'I want to bring the dogs with us, not only would I miss them but I feel bad if I have to leave them behind but I don't like the idea of having a petsitter or stranger in my home,' she said. 'I have a sister who lives in LA and it is pretty standard over there if you have a dog it will go to restaurants or hotels with you. 'We are a bit behind here, I feel like it's starting to take off but it is still really hard to find accommodation that will allow you to bring two dogs, some places might only allow one small dog. 'When we take the dogs we also like to be near parks or trails so we can take them for a walk. 'There are also lot of places that don't allow dogs on beaches so this app is a great idea, it will make travelling a lot easier.'