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New Zealand looks at reopening international air travel

  • : Oil products
  • 21/08/13

New Zealand plans to tentatively reopen its borders to international air travel from next early next year depending on its domestic Covid-19 vaccination rate. Closure of its borders has weighed heavily on the country's jet fuel demand.

New Zealand's jet fuel consumption remained at subdued levels during January-March, according to government data, because of its extended Covid-19 restrictions on international travel, despite increased use for domestic flights.

The New Zealand government last month announced the suspension of quarantine-free travel with Australia for eight weeks following a continuing Covid-19 outbreak in Sydney. Sydney is traditionally one of the busiest air travel routes to New Zealand.

Reopening borders and moving to an individualised risk-based model for quarantine-free travel will depend on enough people getting vaccinated, before moving to a phased introduction of border settings. New Zealand plans categorising air travellers as low-risk, medium-risk and high-risk, based on the risk associated with where the traveller is coming from and their vaccination status,

Businesses that need to send staff overseas will be invited to express interest in participating in a pilot scheme that will run during October-December this year, New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern said.

The closure of the travel bubble with Australia has forced national airline Air New Zealand to defer until at least the January-March next year its capital raising, which was part of a plan when the government provided emergency funding to the airline in March 2020 when the pandemic first hit global air travel.


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