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An engine failure forced pilots on a Quantas flight to make an emergency landing shortly after it took from an airport in Sydney, Australia. Passengers heard a loud bang shortly after flight 520 from Sydney to Brisbane left the runway on Friday afternoon, the airline said in a statement, adding that it was not an explosion. Engineers concluded after a preliminary inspection and confirmed the Boeing 737 jet suffered a contained engine failure, the statement added. “After circling for a short period of time, the aircraft landed safely at Sydney Airport,” Qantas’ chief pilot, Capt. The plane “was banking a lot” as it turned to prepare for its eventual descent back into Sydney, Willacy said.
Persons: shudder, Mark Willacy, , Richard Tobiano, Willacy, ” Firefighters Organizations: Passengers, Brisbane, Engineers, Boeing, ABC News, Sydney Airport, Qantas ’, Locations: Sydney, Australia, Australian,
Qantas flight makes emergency landing after engine failure
  + stars: | 2024-11-08 | by ( ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
Sydney Reuters —A Qantas Airways plane bound for Brisbane suffered an engine failure after takeoff on Friday and circled for a short period of time before returning safely to Sydney Airport, the Australian airline said. The airline said its engineers had conducted a preliminary inspection of the engine and confirmed it was a contained engine failure, meaning the internal engine parts stayed within the protective housing designed to keep them safely enclosed. Uncontained engine failures, where engine fragments fly out of this housing, can result in serious damage to the main body of an aircraft. Qantas flight QF520 took off from Sydney at 12:35 p.m. (8.35 p.m. Thursday ET), circled a few times and diverted to land at Sydney, tracking data from Flightradar24 showed. Qantas said the plane landed safely after appropriate procedures were conducted and added it would be investigating the cause of the engine issue.
Persons: Mark Willacy, QF520, , France’s Safran Organizations: Sydney Reuters —, Qantas Airways, Sydney Airport, ABC, Qantas, Sydney, Boeing, CFM International, GE Aerospace Locations: Brisbane, Sydney, Flightradar24
Qantas flight QF520 had to make an emergency landing in Sydney after a suspected engine failure. As of June 30, the Qantas Group had 347 aircraft, 75 of which were Boeing 737-800 planes. AdvertisementA Qantas flight headed to Brisbane had to make an emergency landing at Sydney Airport after a suspected engine failure. Qantas flight QF520 made a safe landing just after 1 p.m. local time, a spokesperson for Sydney Airport told Business Insider. As of June 30, the Qantas Group had 347 aircraft, 75 of which were Boeing 737-800 planes.
Persons: QF520, Organizations: Qantas, Boeing, Qantas Group, Service, Sydney Airport, Business, Aviation, Fighting, Sydney, Airbus, Alaskan Airlines Locations: Sydney, Brisbane, Tokyo, Oregon, California
Brisbane, Australia CNN —A man wanted for allegedly throwing scalding coffee on a baby in an unprovoked attack at a park in the northern Australian state of Queensland is now the subject of an international manhunt. Closed circuit television video released by police shows the man running from the scene, wearing a blue plaid shirt, black hat and glasses. This picture released by Queensland Police shows a man they claim poured hot coffee on a baby in a Brisbane park. But that’s not always the case.”Police say the man fled Australia a few days after the attack. I’m very confident that if you’re looking at that footage and you know that person in there, you’re going to know who it is,” Dalton told media on August 28.
Persons: Australia CNN —, Paul Dalton, Dalton, ” Dalton, , , that’s Organizations: Australia CNN, Queensland Police, Queensland police, Sydney Airport, Police, ” Police, Queensland Locations: Brisbane, Australia, Australian, Queensland, Hanlon, New South Wales, Victoria
When my wife got pregnant with our 14-month-old Noah, we continued traveling throughout the pregnancy and Noah's infancy. Yusuf OmarAdapting Noah to nomad lifeSumaiya: Now, we're building our company and raising Noah, our 14-month-old, as best we can. AdvertisementSumaiya and Yusuf Omar flying with baby Noah. When we're on business trips, hotels are a business expense, which is the majority of why we travel. In addition to hotels, we've also spent short stints at our parents' homes and lived in a rented van.
Persons: , Yusuf, Sumaiya Omar, Noah, Sumaiya, Noah's, Noah Omar, Yusuf Omar, COVID, Yusuf Omar Living, we're, Yusuf Omar Sumaiya, we've, Yusuf Omar We, Omar, London Yusuf Omar Yusuf, nannies, Yusuf Omar Yusuf Organizations: Service, Business, Hindustan Times, CNN International, CNN, UN Locations: London, Sumaiya, Durban, South Africa, Gold Coast, Australia, India, Sydney, isn't, New York
The outage was attributed to CrowdStrike, a cybersecurity firm whose software is used by scores of industries around the world to protect against hackers and outside breaches. At least three major U.S. airlines, American, United and Delta, grounded all flights, according to the Federal Aviation Administration, one day after a major outage at Microsoft briefly grounded some flights. “A global technical outage has impacted some airplane operations and terminal services,” the airport said on social media. Disruptions were also reported at Berlin Brandenburg Airport, Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam and Dubai International Airport. Microsoft said the problem had affected multiple systems for customers in the central United States.
Persons: CrowdStrike, ” Michelle McGuinness, Australia’s, Organizations: United, Federal Aviation Administration, Microsoft, Sydney Airport, , Cyber Security, Berlin Brandenburg Airport, Dubai International Locations: Australia, Amsterdam, Phoenix, United States
Read previewMajor airlines, banks, and supermarkets are experiencing widespread disruptions linked to an IT outage after Microsoft reported problems with its online services. American Airlines, Delta Airlines, and United Airlines are among the airlines that have issued ground stops for their aircraft due to communication issues, Reuters reported. A spokesperson for Singapore's Changi Airport told BI: "Due to a global outage affecting IT systems of many organizations, the check-in process for some airlines at Changi Airport is being managed manually." On Thursday night, Frontier Airlines issued a ground stop order, saying in a statement: "flight operations are currently being impacted by a major Microsoft technical outage." AdvertisementThe Austin-headquartered tech giant, which specializes in security for cloud computing platforms, confirmed with CNBC on Friday morning that it was receiving outage reports.
Persons: , Dan Coatsworth, AJ Bell, CrowdStrike, Omer Grossman, CyberArk, Grossman Organizations: Service, Microsoft, American Airlines, Delta Airlines, United Airlines, Reuters, London Stock, Business, BI, , Local, Changi, Changi Airport, Melbourne Airport, Sydney Airport, Rajiv Gandhi, Edinburgh Airport, Berlin Airport, Ryanair, Europe's, Frontier Airlines, CNBC, Windows Locations: Singapore, Changi, Australia, Delhi, India, Germany
CrowdStrike, the cybersecurity firm that services numerous industries, was down across parts of the world on Friday morning, halting news broadcasts and grounding flights. In Australia, the New South Wales Police Force said on social media that it was aware of a system outage. Problems persisted at Sydney Airport, one Australia’s largest and busiest transportation hubs, just as the weekend was getting underway for many. “A global technical outage has impacted some airplane operations and terminal services,” the airport said on social media. “Flights are currently arriving and departing, however there may be some delays throughout the evening.”
Persons: Organizations: New South Wales Police Force, Sydney Airport, Locations: Australia
If you have an Amex Platinum or Centurion card, you can access Amex Centurion lounges. For many frequent travelers, the single best card perk is access to airport lounges — particularly, access to Amex Centurion lounges. Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport (Concourse E)Charlotte Douglas International Airport (between Concourse D and E)Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (Terminal D)Denver International Airport (Concourse C)Intercontinental Houston Airport (Terminal D)Las Vegas McCarran International Airport (Concourse D)Los Angeles International Airport (Tom Bradley International Terminal)Miami International Airport (Concourse D)John F. Kennedy International Airport (New York)Newark Liberty International Airport (Terminal A) — slated for 2026New York LaGuardia Airport (Terminal B, pre-security)Philadelphia International Airport (Terminal A)Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport (Terminal 4)San Francisco International Airport (Terminal 3)Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (Concourse B)Washington, DC Ronald Reagan National Airport (Terminal B) — coming soonInternational locations Chevron icon It indicates an expandable section or menu, or sometimes previous / next navigation options. Hartford Bradley International Airport (Terminal A)Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky International Airport (Concourse B)John Glenn Columbus International Airport (Concourse B)Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (Terminal 3)Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport (Concourse B)Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport (Terminal 1)Oakland International Airport (Terminal 1)Palm Beach International Airport (Concourse B)Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport (Terminals 3 and 4)Rhode Island T.F. You can only get into a Centurion Lounge if you have an Amex Platinum or an Amex Centurion credit card.
Persons: cardholders, Uber, Wiley, Julie Mehretu, Peacock, Uber Cash, Cardholders, Charlotte Douglas, Tom Bradley, John F, Ronald, , Mariano, John Glenn Columbus Organizations: Delta Reserve, Read, American Express, Amex, Express, Hilton, Marriott, Saks, Entertainment, Disney, ESPN, The New York Times, Street, American, Walmart, TSA, Global, Saks Fifth, Delta SkyMiles ®, Delta SkyMiles, Chevron, Atlanta Hartsfield, Jackson International, Charlotte Douglas International Airport, Fort Worth International, Denver International, Intercontinental Houston Airport, Las Vegas McCarran International Airport, Los Angeles International Airport, Tom, International Airport, Kennedy International, Newark Liberty International, New York LaGuardia, Philadelphia International, Sky Harbor International, San Francisco International, Tacoma International, Ronald Reagan National Airport, Hong Kong International, London, Stockholm Arlanda, Shivaji International, Delhi Indira Gandhi International, Melbourne, International, Monterrey, Sydney, Centurion Studios, Hartford Bradley International Airport, Northern Kentucky International, John Glenn Columbus International, Hollywood International, Spartanburg International, Saint Paul International Airport, Oakland International, Rhode, Green, Tahoe, Sacramento International, Centurion, SkyMiles Locations: , London, Hong Kong, Fort Lauderdale, Oakland, Sacramento, Hulu, Delta, Dallas, New York, Seattle, Washington, Stockholm, Mumbai, Shivaji, Delhi, Buenos Aires, Mexico, Cincinnati, Greenville, Spartanburg, Minneapolis, Reno, U.S
Qantas used an Airbus A380 to replace three flights from Melbourne to Sydney on Friday. Demand for air travel has been "incredibly high" during Taylor Swift's Australian tour, Qantas said. AdvertisementAustralia's Qantas flew an Airbus A380 from Melbourne to Sydney on Friday to help cope with huge demand for air travel during Taylor Swift's Eras Tour. AdvertisementCoupled with "incredibly high demand" for flights into the city because of Swift's tour, Qantas decided to operate a special flight to transport the passengers. Swift's tour has been huge for local economies.
Persons: Taylor, , Swift, Sebastian Kahnert, QF7168, she's, AirDNA Organizations: Qantas, Airbus, Service, Australia's Qantas, Boeing, Qantas Airbus, Getty, Wales Locations: Melbourne, Sydney, Boston, Pittsburgh, Los Angeles, London, Singapore, Flightradar24, Cardiff, Warsaw, Poland
This all comes as Larry Fink, 71, is entering what is likely the last chapter of a successful career as cofounder and chief executive of $10 trillion BlackRock. Here's everything you need to know:BlackRock is set to buy Global Infrastructure Partners in its biggest deal in 15 yearsThroughout 2023, Fink signaled that a "transformational deal" was on the cards. He found his target in private equity firm and infrastructure investor Global Infrastructure Partners, the firm announced on Friday. Jessica Tan, head of BlackRocks' sustainability and transitions strategy, will head the global product solutions team in the Americas. Charles Hatami, global head of the financial and strategic investor group that focuses on relationships with large investors like insurers and sovereign wealth funds, will join BlackRock's global executive committee.
Persons: Larry Fink, Fink, Rob Kapito, BlackRock iShares, GIP, Kapito, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, David Solomon's, Ogunlesi, Wells, Mike Mayo, Larry, Stephen Cohen, Salim Ramji, Jessica Tan, Jane Sloan, GIP's, Edwin Conway, Conway, Rachel Lord, Lord, Charles Hatami Organizations: Business, BlackRock, Global Infrastructure Partners, GIP, London Gatwick, Wall Street, Asia Pacific, Securities, Exchange Commission Locations: Sydney, Bayo, Ogunlesi, BlackRock, Americas, Europe, East, India, Asia, Pacific
Israeli airstrikes hit two refugee camps in the central Gaza Strip on Sunday, killing scores of people, health officials said. The strikes came as the U.S. keeps urging Israel to take a humanitarian pause from its relentless bombardment of Gaza and rising civilian deaths. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken traveled to Ramallah in the West Bank for a previously unannounced meeting with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Political Cartoons View All 1234 ImagesCurrently:— Gaza has lost telecom contact again, while Israel’s military announces it has surrounded Gaza City. — A U.N. official says the average Palestinian in Gaza is living on two pieces of bread a day.
Persons: Israel, Antony Blinken, Mahmoud Abbas, Blinken, Mohammed Shia, Benjamin Netanyahu, Joe Biden, evacuee Sara El, Masry, , JORDAN, Jordan, King Abdullah II, , Michael Hertzog, ” Hertzog, OBAMA, Barack Obama, , he’s, ” Obama, I’ve, Alp Toker, Juliette Touma, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Ismail Haniyeh, IRNA, Khamenei, Haniyeh, JERUSALEM —, Jacob Lew, Biden, ” Lew, Isaac Herzog, Lew, Antony Blinken’s Organizations: West Bank, Iraqi, Hamas, Ministry, WHO, GAZA, SYDNEY AIRPORT SYDNEY, Nine, Sydney Airport, Australian, United Arab Emirates, Mideast, Central Command, FIRE, NATIONS, Inter, Agency, UNRWA, United Nations, Jordanian, Twitter, ISRAEL, CBS, JERUSALEM, Paltel, Associated Press, Hezbollah, U.S, Israel, Embassy, . Riot Locations: Gaza, Ramallah, Baghdad, Jordan, Israel, United States, Egypt, Qatar, Gaza City, , U.S, Berlin, israel, Sydney, Rafah, DUBAI, United Arab, Suez, ., Ohio, America's, Iran, UN, Palestinian Territory, GAZA AMMAN, Jordanian, GAZA, Palestinian, IRAN, TEHRAN, Lebanon, GAZA JERUSALEM, Beit Hanoun, TURKEY, ISTANBUL –, Ankara, Turkish
Qantas Airways QF100 flight, which marks the airline's 100th birthday, departs from Sydney Airport to fly over Sydney Harbour in Australia, November 16, 2020. Qantas shares fell 2.7% to A$4.7 in early trade, whereas Alliance shed around 1%. He added that Qantas is dealing with a brand crisis, a part of which is tied to perceptions that the company acts anti-competitively. Qantas is not the only airline that is aiming to expand charter service offerings with smaller peer Regional Express Holdings (REX.AX) buying charter operator National Jet Express in July 2022. ($1 = 1.5785 Australian dollars)Reporting by Rishav Chatterjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh KuberOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Gregg Porteous, Tim Waterer, Kyle Rodda, Rishav Chatterjee, Shailesh Organizations: Qantas Airways QF100, Sydney Airport, Sydney Harbour, Handout, REUTERS, Qantas, Qantas Airways, Aviation Services, Australian Competition, Consumer Commission, Alliance, KCM Trade, Capital.com, Regional Express Holdings, National Jet Express, Thomson Locations: Australia, Bengaluru
Virgin Australia's IPO executive David Marr resigns
  + stars: | 2023-10-17 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: 1 min
Aircraft from Australia's second largest airline, Virgin Australia, sit on the tarmac at the domestic terminal of Sydney Airport in Australia, August 19, 2018. Picture taken August 19, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 17 (Reuters) - Bain Capital-owned Virgin Australia (IPO-VIR.AX) on Tuesday said its Chief Development Officer David Marr, who was assigned to lead the airline's plans for an eventual initial public offering (IPO), has stepped down from his role. "A significant amount of this work is now complete and while we are committed to an IPO as soon as practicable, the timing of an actual listing is dependent on capital markets conditions," the airline said in an emailed response to Reuters. Reporting by Poonam Behura in Bengaluru; Editing by Janane VenkatramanOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: David Gray, David Marr, Poonam, Janane Organizations: Virgin, Sydney Airport, REUTERS, Bain Capital, Virgin Australia, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Australia's, Virgin Australia, Australia, Bengaluru
Qantas overhaul gets stuck on tarmac
  + stars: | 2023-10-11 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Qantas Airways QF100 flight, which marks the airline's 100th birthday, departs from Sydney Airport to fly over Sydney Harbour in Australia, November 16, 2020. Gregg Porteous/Destination NSW/Handout via REUTERS Acquire Licensing RightsMELBOURNE, Oct 11 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Qantas Airways (QAN.AX) customers are already used to interminable waits due to postponed or cancelled flights and lost luggage. Now the $5.4 billion airline has shunted its much-needed governance overhaul into an unnecessary holding pattern. On Wednesday Qantas said Richard Goyder is stepping down after five years as chair along with two other directors who have been on the board for a decade. And Goyder intends to remain in the cockpit until just before the company’s annual meeting in over a year’s time.
Persons: Gregg Porteous, , Richard Goyder, Alan Joyce, Jaqueline Hey, Maxine Brenner, Goyder, Antony Currie, Una Galani, Thomas Shum Organizations: Qantas Airways QF100, Sydney Airport, Sydney Harbour, Handout, REUTERS Acquire, Rights, Reuters, Qantas Airways, Wednesday Qantas, Qantas, X, Alstom, Thomson Locations: Australia, Brussels
Aircraft from Australia's second largest airline, Virgin Australia, sit on the tarmac at the domestic terminal of Sydney Airport in Australia, August 19, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 10 (Reuters) - Bain Capital-owned Virgin Australia said on Tuesday that the airline returned to a profit for the first time in 11 years for fiscal 2023, buoyed by a strong recovery in travel demand following the COVID-19 pandemic. The carrier reported a statutory net profit after tax of A$129 million ($82.93 million) for the full year ended June 30, 2023, compared with a loss of A$565.5 million in 2022. Virgin Australia now has a considerably stronger balance sheet with continued significant improvement in its cost base, CFO Race Strauss said in a statement on Tuesday. Virgin was upbeat on its capital position, reporting total debt including leases of A$2.3 billion and over A$1 billion of cash on the balance sheet.
Persons: David Gray, Bain, Race Strauss, Strauss, Roushni Nair, Nausheen, Rashmi Organizations: Virgin, Sydney Airport, REUTERS, Bain Capital, Virgin Australia, Australian Securities Exchange, Reuters, GQG Partners, Airlines, Thomson Locations: Australia's, Virgin Australia, Australia, Bengaluru
REUTERS/Loren Elliott/File Photo/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSYDNEY, Sept 27 (Reuters) - The chairman of Australia's Qantas Airways (QAN.AX) on Wednesday vowed to stay in his role despite a host of scandals engulfing the airline, saying its biggest shareholders wanted leadership continuity even as its shares track a one-year low. "I've had meetings with our major shareholders two weeks ago, and they are very strongly supportive of me staying," Goyder told the hearing. "While I retain the confidence of shareholders and the board, I will continue to serve. But she and Goyder, the Qantas chairman since 2018, denied having any discussions about the Qatari request with any member of the federal government. Qatar Airways' senior vice-president of global sales, Matt Raos, told the hearing the company was "surprised and shocked" its application was denied without a reason given.
Persons: Loren Elliott, Richard Goyder, I've, Goyder, we've, isn't, Vanessa Hudson, Jayne Hrdlicka, Hrdlicka, Matt Raos, Byron Kaye, Gerry Doyle Organizations: Qantas, Sydney Airport, REUTERS, Rights, Qantas Airways, Stock, Qatar Airways, Virgin, Thomson Locations: Sydney, Australia, Virgin Australia, Qatar
Pilots at Australia's Qantas demand chair quit over scandals
  + stars: | 2023-09-26 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
Qantas Airways QF100 flight, which marks the airline's 100th birthday, departs from Sydney Airport to fly over Sydney Harbour in Australia, November 16, 2020. "We have totally lost confidence in Goyder and his board," AIPA President Captain Tony Lucas said in a statement. "Qantas desperately needs a culture reset but how can this happen with Richard Goyder as chairman?" Qantas declined to comment, referring Reuters to previous public comments from Goyder where he refused to quit. Goyder, who has been the airline's chairman since 2018, is not up for reelection at its annual meeting in November.
Persons: Gregg Porteous, Vanessa Hudson, Richard Goyder, Captain Tony Lucas, Goyder, Alan Joyce, Albanese, Byron Kaye, Jamie Freed Organizations: Qantas Airways QF100, Sydney Airport, Sydney Harbour, Handout, REUTERS, Rights, Australia's Qantas Airways, Australian, International Pilots Association, Qantas, Reuters, Qatar Airways, Thomson Locations: Australia, Goyder
Three pilot groups, including pilots from aircraft charter company Network Aviation, have been negotiating with Qantas management over wage policy revisions. A spokesperson for QantasLink, an airline brand of Qantas, termed the step towards industrial action by the AFAP as "disappointing". "We have already reached in-principle agreement with the two other unions representing Network Aviation pilots, and we're continuing to negotiate in good faith to secure new agreements with our turboprop pilots." There are contingency plans in place to minimise disruptions to customers if the union proceeds with the industrial action, the spokesperson told Reuters. The AFAP also flagged the potential industrial action might impact certain charter flight operations to large mines and oil gas projects in Western Australia.
Persons: Loren Elliott, Rishav Chatterjee, Lewis Jackson, Aishwarya Nair, Rashmi Organizations: Qantas, Sydney Airport, REUTERS, Pilots, Network Aviation, Qantas Airways, Australian Federation of Air Pilots, Reuters, Network Aviation's, Thomson Locations: Sydney, Australia, Western Australia
Adding to its woes, last month the antitrust regulator sued Qantas accusing it of selling fares on thousands of already-cancelled flights in 2022. The so-called "flying kangaroo" said it would now spend A$80 million ($52 million) on "customer improvements" on top of the A$150 million previously flagged. "The group will continue to absorb these higher costs, but will monitor fuel prices in the weeks ahead and, if current levels are sustained, will look to adjust its settings," Qantas said. "Any changes would look to balance the recovery of higher costs with the importance of affordable travel in an environment where fares are already elevated." RBC Capital Markets analyst Owen Birrell said the company would likely absorb the higher fuel costs "until its target margins come under pressure and then would seek to claw back those costs through capacity cuts and higher fares.
Persons: Loren Elliott, Owen Birrell, Byron Kaye, Himanshi, Kim Coghill, Subhranshu Organizations: Qantas, Sydney Airport, REUTERS, Australia's, Qantas Airways, RBC Capital, Thomson Locations: Sydney, Australia, SYDNEY, Bengaluru
Australia's Qantas flags hit from higher fuel prices
  + stars: | 2023-09-24 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
REUTERS/Loren Elliott/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSept 25 (Reuters) - Australia's Qantas Airways (QAN.AX) said on Monday higher fuel prices were expected to drive its fuel bill higher by about A$200 million ($128.80 million) in the first half of financial year 2024. "Fuel prices have increased by around 30% since May 2023, including a 10% spike since August. This is driven by a combination of higher oil prices, higher refiner margins and a lower Australian dollar," the carrier said in a statement. The company expects a further A$50 million impact due to non-fuel-related foreign exchange changes in the first half of the current fiscal year. Qantas said the customer-improvement initiative would be funded from its profit.
Persons: Loren Elliott, Himanshi, Kim Coghill, Subhranshu Organizations: Qantas, Sydney Airport, REUTERS, Australia's Qantas Airways, Thomson Locations: Sydney, Australia, Bengaluru
On top of El Niño, there’s another climate fluctuation in the mix that amps up the likelihood of heat and drought. A fire rages in Bobin, 350 km north of Sydney, on November 9, 2019, during Australia's catastrophic Black Summer fire season. A combination of extreme heat and wind would likely fuel very intense fires “that will seem to come from nowhere,” he added. Whether summer heat will be unprecedented remains uncertain. “Increasing extreme heat is the clearest example,”he said, but it’s worsening the impacts of drought and extreme rain too.
Persons: CNN — It’s, El, , David Bowman, Steve Christo, ” Bowman, Karl Braganza, , , Peter Parks, Robb Webb, rainier, ” Braganza, Andrea Taschetto, Jason Evans Organizations: CNN, Sydney Marathon, University of Tasmania, Sydney, Getty, Australia’s, Meteorology, El, National Council, University of New Locations: Australia, New South Wales, AFP, Bobin, Sydney, Sydney’s, University of New South Wales
Alan Joyce, Chief Executive Officer of Qantas, speaks with members of the media at an event celebrating Qantas' 100th birthday at Sydney Airport in Sydney, Australia, November 16, 2020. Most of the amount was share-based incentives that Joyce was allowed to cash in after they vested, according to the report. It could also "claw back" unvested stock bonuses for Joyce, currently worth A$6 million, it said. Joyce's final pay packet encapsulates his decade and a half of running the company, which dominates Australian air travel. Qantas must return to the Federal Court to determine what it must pay in penalties and compensation to affected workers.
Persons: Alan Joyce, Loren Elliott, Joyce, Richard Goyder, disquiet, Alan, Goyder, Byron Kaye, Sameer Manekar, Rashmi Aich, Gerry Doyle Organizations: Qantas, Sydney Airport, REUTERS, Rights Companies Qantas Airways Ltd, Australia's Qantas Airways, Consumer Commission, High Court, Federal, Thomson Locations: Sydney, Australia, Bengaluru
The lower-ranking Federal Court in 2021 found Qantas broke the law by outsourcing the ground handling jobs, but the airline appealed the ruling in the High Court which upheld the decision on Thursday. The matter now returns to the Federal Court which will decide penalties and compensation for affected employees. "These workers have been put through hell," said Michael Kaine, secretary of the Transport Workers Union (TWU) which brought the lawsuit. Qantas said in a statement that it accepted the High Court decision and noted the Federal Court had already ruled out forcing the company to reinstate the workers. It said it had already made an unspecified provision in its accounts for penalties and compensation for affected employees after the Federal Court decision.
Persons: David Gray, Michael Kaine, Kaine, Byron Kaye, Roushni Nair, Subhranshu Sahu, Jamie Freed Organizations: Qantas Airways Airbus, Sydney Airport, REUTERS, Rights, Qantas Airways, Australia, Qantas, Qatar Airways, Federal, Transport Workers Union, Thomson Locations: Australia, Sydney, Bengaluru
REUTERS/Loren Elliott(Reuters) -Air New Zealand on Tuesday warned that inspections of RTX’s Pratt & Whitney engines would have a “significant” impact on its flight schedule from next year. “This issue will further reduce engine availability and is expected to have a significant impact on the airline’s schedule from January 2024,” Air New Zealand said in a statement. Air New Zealand has 16 A320neo jets in its fleet of 106 aircraft, servicing Australia and the Pacific Island markets and, to a much lesser extent, the domestic market. Major customers that took delivery of affected A320neo jets include Spirit Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Hawaiian Airlines and Wizz Air, according to aviation data provider Cirium. Hungary’s Wizz Air, one of Europe’s largest lost-cost airlines, on Monday said its capacity could be reduced by 10% in the second half of 2024 as a result.
Persons: Loren Elliott, RTX’s Pratt, Greg Hayes Organizations: Air, Sydney Airport, REUTERS, Reuters, Zealand, Whitney, Airbus, ” Air, Air New, Pacific, Spirit Airlines, JetBlue Airways, Hawaiian Airlines, Wizz Locations: Zealand, Sydney, Australia, Air New Zealand
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