Powered by MOMENTUM MEDIA
australian aviation logo

Trans-Tasman bubble ‘on backburner’, says Ardern

written by Adam Thorn | August 4, 2020

An Air New Zealand Boeing 787-9 at Sydney Airport. (Seth Jaworski)
An Air New Zealand Boeing 787-9 at Sydney Airport. (Seth Jaworski)

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has confirmed plans for a trans-Tasman bubble have now been “put on the backburner” due to Victoria’s COVID-19 resurgence.

She also indicated that Australia would need to be free of unknown locally acquired cases – so-called community transmission – for at least 28 days before travel could begin.

This content is available exclusively to Australian Aviation members.
Login
Become a Member
To continue reading the rest of this article, please login.

or

To unlock all Australian Aviation magazine content and again unlimited access to our daily news and features, become a member today!
A monthly membership is only $5.99 or save with our annual plans.
PRINT
$49.95 for 1 year Become a Member
See benefits
  • Australian Aviation quarterly print & digital magazines
  • Access to In Focus reports every month on our website
PRINT + DIGITAL
$99.95 for 1 year Become a Member
$179.95 for 2 years Become a Member
See benefits
  • Unlimited access to all Australian Aviation digital content
  • Access to the Australian Aviation app
  • Australian Aviation quarterly print & digital magazines
  • Access to In Focus reports every month on our website
  • Access to our Behind the Lens photo galleries and other exclusive content
  • Daily news updates via our email bulletin
DIGITAL
$5.99 Monthly Become a Member
$59.95 Annual Become a Member
See benefits
  • Unlimited access to all Australian Aviation digital content
  • Access to the Australian Aviation app
  • Australian Aviation quarterly print & digital magazines
  • Access to In Focus reports every month on our website
  • Access to our Behind the Lens photo galleries and other exclusive content
  • Daily news updates via our email bulletin

The comments mark a turnaround from June, when the country’s Deputy Prime Minister, Winston Peters, argued flights between the two countries should restart even if some Australian states were closed.

PM Ardern, though, was unequivocal when questioned while doing the rounds on a number of radio breakfast shows on Monday.

She said Victoria’s outbreak was a “major step back for trans-Tasman travel” and that it was “very hard to predict” when it could restart.

==
==

“Anywhere where we have COVID-free travel they have to be free of community transmission for a period of time – that will be some time for Australia,” she said.

In June, Deputy PM Peters said the project had run into “the roadblock of federalism” because some Australian states were refusing to open their borders.

“We should not have states being held back by the slowest mover, so to speak, so let’s get going,” he said.

New Zealand now appears to be reaping the benefits from all-but eradicating COVID-19 and halting social distancing.

On Monday, Australian Aviation reported that Air New Zealand flew a record number of passengers during the July school holidays.

The results encouraged the airline to increase its domestic capacity to 70 per cent of pre-COVID-19 levels in August.

The airline had targeted running at just 55 per cent but said it was “pleasantly surprised” by demand.

It has been 94 days since New Zealand last saw a case of COVID-19 with no known source.

You need to be a member to post comments. Become a member today!

Comments (3)

  • Darren

    says:

    Can we start with WA, SA, NT, QLD, TAS residents to fly to NZL and return without quarantine?
    Fiji, Vila and other COVID free countries also…

  • Ian

    says:

    so she’s a pollie & about to get booted in 6 weeks, so reading between the lines, probably means unrestricted flights with no quarantine by late Sept 2020.

  • Ian

    says:

    NZ PM is a pollie so reading between the lines, she’s very worried about losing next months election, so maybe after election NZ border will open to some countries ?

Comments are closed.

Momentum Media Logo
Most Innovative Company
Copyright © 2007-2025 MOMENTUMMEDIA