Qantas Jetstar cuts NZ flights due to fuel crisis amid global fuel shortages
Consensus Summary
Qantas’ Jetstar subsidiary has cut 12% of flights between Australia and New Zealand due to soaring jet fuel prices driven by the Middle East conflict, with 55+ routes affected according to aviation data. Passengers on impacted flights were contacted and offered alternative travel, mirroring Air New Zealand’s earlier reductions. Beyond aviation, Australia faces a broader fuel crisis: 8% of service stations (560 total) lack diesel or petrol, prompting Energy Minister Chris Bowen to temporarily lower diesel supply standards. While both sources agree on the core issue—fuel costs and flight cuts—details vary: NEWSCOMAU emphasizes Australia’s domestic fuel shortages and political fallout, including a ‘no fuel finder’ website and debates over excise taxes, whereas ABC expands globally, noting Vietnam and the Philippines may also ground planes. Contradictions arise in specific numbers (e.g., flight cuts vs. station shortages) and phrasing of policy changes, but the consensus remains clear: geopolitical tensions are exacerbating fuel costs, forcing airlines to scale back operations and governments to intervene.
✓ Verified by 2+ sources
Key details reported by multiple sources:
- Jetstar NZ has reduced 12% of flights between Auckland–Sydney and Auckland–Brisbane routes from May due to rising jet fuel costs linked to the Middle East conflict
- Jetstar NZ contacted impacted passengers directly, offering most same-day travel alternatives
- More than 55 flights have been cut from the trans-Tasman route by Jetstar (per Cirium data)
- Australia’s fuel crisis includes 8% of service stations nationwide without one or more fuel grades (560 stations total)
- Energy Minister Chris Bowen lowered the diesel flashpoint threshold from 61.5C to 60.5C for six months to increase supply options
- Air New Zealand also reduced 5% of its domestic/international flights (March 16–May 3) due to jet fuel price volatility from the Middle East conflict
Points of Difference
Details reported by only one source:
- Jetstar NZ cited ‘other rising costs’ beyond fuel in its statement, including engineering and fleet requirements
- Adjustments made to optimise fleet across the network with schedule tweaks to maintain near-original flight times
- NSW had 164 stations without diesel and 289 without at least one fuel type; Victoria had 162 stations affected
- Treasurer Jim Chalmers ruled out pausing the fuel excise (52c/L) or halving it, citing responsible cost-of-living relief
- Liberal senator Bridget McKenzie launched a ‘no fuel finder’ website for community-reported shortages, claiming Bowen lacks mechanisms to address them
- Employment Minister Amanda Rishworth admitted six of 81 expected fuel ships had been cancelled
- NSW Opposition Leader Kellie Sloane proposed free public transport over Easter to offset fuel costs
- Finance Services Union requested employers suspend in-office requirements due to cost-of-living pressures
- Jetstar confirmed 12% of services impacted on Auckland–Sydney *and* Auckland–Brisbane routes (not just Sydney alone)
- Services between Auckland–Christchurch and Auckland–Wellington in NZ were also reduced
- Vietnam Airlines plans to cancel 20+ domestic flights weekly and suspend seven routes due to fuel shortages
- Philippines president stated a ‘distinct possibility’ of grounding planes due to jet fuel shortages
Contradictions
Conflicting information between sources:
- NEWSCOMAU reports 55+ flights cut from trans-Tasman routes (per Cirium), while ABC states Jetstar confirmed 12% of services impacted but does not specify exact flight numbers
- NEWSCOMAU claims 560 stations nationwide lack fuel (8% of 7000+ stations), but ABC does not provide a total station count or percentage for comparison
- NEWSCOMAU states Bowen ‘lowered the technical threshold for diesel’ (flashpoint), while ABC describes it as ‘lowering the sulphur content standard’—terms may differ but imply similar policy
- NEWSCOMAU reports Bowen met state/territory ministers and issued a communique, but ABC does not mention this document or its contents
- ABC highlights Vietnam Airlines’ 20+ weekly cancellations and Philippine risks, while NEWSCOMAU focuses solely on Australia’s domestic fuel crisis without international airline examples
Source Articles
Qantas’ huge call as fuel costs soar
Qantas has made a huge call on one of its most crucial routes due to the soaring cost of jet fuel, as Australia’s service stations grapple with a critical petrol shortage....
Qantas reduces Jetstar flights to New Zealand due to rising jet fuel prices
Jetstar announces it is reducing flights between Australia and New Zealand due to the rising cost of jet fuel as a result of the war in the Middle East....