Arikah Map

Kangaroo route

The kangaroo route is a term to denote passenger airline flights between Europe and Australia or New Zealand; these flights generally have a stopover along the Southeast Asia flight corridor. Flights along this route are considered to generate high yield for airlines; this is due to the large population of European ancestry in Australia and New Zealand, along with the long distances involved. However, because of agreements between the various governments along the route, the number of airlines allowed to fly the route has traditionally been restricted. The name refers not only to the kangaroo, native to Australia, but also to the fact that the journey was traditionally accomplished with at least two "hops" due to the stopovers, alluding to the kangaroo's means of locomotion.

The main stop-over point is at Singapore Changi Airport, where intense competition is fought between Singapore Airlines and a British Airways-Qantas alliance. Over 3.6 million passengers travel on the Singapore-Australia sector alone per year [1], with most transiting on to Europe-bound flights. Over time, other airports have tried to take a bigger share of this stop-over business with varied success. While Bangkok International Airport's share has remained steady (albeit small) in comparison, Kuala Lumpur International Airport lost out substantially in the race when both British Airways and Qantas stopped their flights to the airport altogether, leaving Malaysia Airlines and Austrian Airlines as the only players. Given the range of newer Airbus and Boeing models, it is now possible for direct flights between Europe and Australia, with Perth as the key departure/destination point [2]; it remains to be seen whether airlines will take advantage of this possiblility.

In recent years, Emirates and other airlines in the Middle East have been aggressively promoting the use of their airports (such as Dubai) as stop-over points. The Hong Kong authorities have similarly begun to open up their airspace, allowing Virgin Atlantic to enter this market (in December 2004), and giving Qantas the rights to fly from Hong Kong onwards to London in direct competition with Cathay Pacific. Air New Zealand introduced flights from Auckland to London via Hong Kong in October 2006.

Despite the growing competition from Asian and Middle Eastern carriers, the only airlines offering Kangaroo route flights with same flight number and same aircraft from start to finish are Air New Zealand, Austrian Airlines, British Airways, Qantas and Virgin Atlantic.


Contents

Routes by airline

AirlineEuropean Departure Point(s)StopoverAustralasian Departure Point(s)
Aerolíneas ArgentinasBarcelona, Madrid, RomeBuenos AiresMelbourne, Sydney
Air ChinaFrankfurt, London (Heathrow), Madrid, Milan, Moscow, Munich, Paris, Rome, StocklomBeijingAuckland, Sydney
Air MauritiusParis, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), ZürichMauritiusPerth, Melbourne, Sydney
Air New ZealandLondon (Heathrow)Los AngelesAuckland
London (Heathrow)Hong KongAuckland
Asiana AirlinesFrankfurt, London (Heathrow)SeoulSydney
Austrian AirlinesViennaSingaporeMelbourne
ViennaKuala LumpurSydney
British AirwaysLondon (Heathrow)SingaporeSydney
London (Heathrow)BangkokSydney
Cathay PacificAmsterdam, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Paris (CDG), RomeHong KongAdelaide, Auckland, Brisbane, Cairns, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
China AirlinesAmsterdam[1], Frankfurt, Rome[1], Vienna[1]TaipeiBrisbane, Sydney
China Eastern AirlinesFrankfurt, London (Heathrow),Moscow, Paris (CDG)ShanghaiMelbourne, Sydney
China Southern AirlinesAmsterdam, ParisGuangzhouMelbourne, Sydney
EmiratesAthens, Birmingham, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Glasgow, Hamburg, Larnaca[1], London (Gatwick), London (Heathrow), Manchester, Milan, Moscow, Munich, Paris (CDG), Rome, Nice, Vienna, ZürichDubaiAuckland[1], Brisbane, Christchurch[1], Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
EVA AirAmsterdam[1], London (Heathrow)[1], Paris (CDG), Vienna[1]TaipeiBrisbane
Gulf AirParis (CDG), Frankfurt, Athens, Dublin, London (Heathrow)Bahrain(Manama)Sydney
Japan AirlinesAmsterdam, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Milan, Moscow, Paris (CDG), Rome, ZürichTokyo (NRT)Brisbane, Sydney
Korean AirAmsterdam, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Moscow, Paris, Prague, Rome, St Petersburg[2], ZürichSeoul (Incheon)Auckland, Brisbane, Christchurch[3], Sydney
LAN Airlines Frankfurt[1],Madrid SantiagoAuckland, Sydney[1]
Malaysia AirlinesAmsterdam, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Manchester, Paris (CDG), Rome, Stockholm, Zürich, ViennaKuala LumpurAdelaide, Auckland, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
QantasLondon(Heathrow)BangkokSydney
London (Heathrow)Hong KongBrisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
Frankfurt, London (Heathrow)SingaporeAdelaide, Brisbane, Cairns, Darwin, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
Royal Brunei AirlinesFrankfurt[1], London (Heathrow)[1]BruneiAuckland[1], Brisbane, Darwin, Perth, Sydney
Singapore AirlinesAmsterdam, Athens, Barcelona[1], Copenhagen, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Manchester, Milan, Moscow[1], Paris (CDG), Rome, ZürichSingaporeAdelaide, Auckland, Brisbane, Christchurch, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
South African Airways Frankfurt,London, Zurich, Paris (CDG)JohannesburgMelbourne (starting 2007), Perth, Sydney (Codeshare with Qantas)
Thai AirwaysAthens, Copenhagen, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Madrid, Munich, Milan, Moscow, Paris (CDG), Rome, Stockholm, ZürichBangkokAuckland, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
Vietnam AirlinesFrankfurt, Moscow, Paris (CDG)Ho Chi Minh CityMelbourne, Sydney
Frankfurt, Moscow, ParisHanoiSydney
Virgin AtlanticLondon (Heathrow)Hong KongSydney

Routes by stopover

AirlineEuropean Departure Point(s)StopoverAustralasian Departure Point(s)
Gulf AirParis (CDG), Frankfurt, Athens, Dublin, London (Heathrow)Bahrain(Manama)Sydney
British AirwaysLondon (Heathrow)BangkokSydney
QantasLondon(Heathrow)Sydney
Thai AirwaysAthens, Copenhagen, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Madrid, Munich, Milan, Moscow, Paris (CDG), Rome, Stockholm, ZürichAuckland, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
Air ChinaFrankfurt, London (Heathrow), Madrid, Milan, Moscow, Munich, Paris, Rome, StocklomBeijingMelbourne, Sydney
Royal Brunei AirlinesFrankfurt[1], London (Heathrow)[1]BruneiAuckland[1], Brisbane, Darwin, Perth, Sydney
Aerolíneas ArgentinasBarcelona, Madrid, RomeBuenos AiresMelbourne, Sydney
EmiratesAthens, Birmingham, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Glasgow, Hamburg, Larnaca[1], London (Gatwick), London (Heathrow), Manchester, Milan, Moscow, Munich, Paris (CDG), Rome, Nice, Vienna, ZürichDubaiAuckland[1], Brisbane, Christchurch[1], Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
China Southern AirlinesAmsterdam, ParisGuangzhouMelbourne, Sydney
Vietnam AirlinesFrankfurt, Moscow, ParisHanoiSydney
Vietnam AirlinesFrankfurt, Moscow, Paris (CDG)Ho Chi Minh CityMelbourne, Sydney
Air New ZealandLondon (Heathrow)Hong KongAuckland
Cathay PacificAmsterdam, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Paris (CDG), RomeAdelaide, Auckland, Brisbane, Cairns, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
QantasLondon (Heathrow)Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
Virgin AtlanticLondon (Heathrow)Sydney
South African Airways Frankfurt,London, Zurich, Paris (CDG)JohannesburgMelbourne (starting 2007), Perth, Sydney (Codeshare with Qantas)
Austrian AirlinesViennaKuala LumpurSydney
Malaysia AirlinesAmsterdam, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Manchester, Paris (CDG), Rome, Stockholm, Zürich, ViennaAdelaide, Auckland, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
Air New ZealandLondon (Heathrow)Los AngelesAuckland
Air MauritiusParis, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), ZürichMauritiusPerth, Melbourne, Sydney
LAN Airlines Frankfurt[1],Madrid SantiagoAuckland, Sydney[1]
Asiana AirlinesFrankfurt, London (Heathrow)Seoul (Incheon)Sydney
Korean AirAmsterdam, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Moscow, Paris, Prague, Rome, St Petersburg[4], ZürichAuckland, Brisbane, Christchurch[5], Sydney
China Eastern AirlinesFrankfurt, London (Heathrow),Moscow, Paris (CDG)ShanghaiMelbourne, Sydney
Austrian AirlinesViennaSingaporeMelbourne
British AirwaysLondon (Heathrow)Sydney
QantasFrankfurt, London (Heathrow)Adelaide, Brisbane, Cairns, Darwin, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
Singapore AirlinesAmsterdam, Athens, Barcelona[1], Copenhagen, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Manchester, Milan, Moscow[1], Paris (CDG), Rome, ZürichAdelaide, Auckland, Brisbane, Christchurch, Melbourne, Perth, Sydney
China AirlinesAmsterdam[1], Frankfurt, Rome[1], Vienna[1]TaipeiBrisbane, Sydney
EVA AirAmsterdam[1], London (Heathrow)[1], Paris (CDG), Vienna[1]Brisbane
Japan AirlinesAmsterdam, Frankfurt, London (Heathrow), Milan, Moscow, Paris (CDG), Rome, ZürichTokyo (NRT)Brisbane, Sydney

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af These flights include destinations involving a second stop-over or more.
  2. ^ Korean Air flights to Saint Petersburg are seasonal rather than year-round.
  3. ^ Korean Air flights to Christchurch are seasonal rather than year-round.
  4. ^ Korean Air flights to Saint Petersburg are seasonal rather than year-round.
  5. ^ Korean Air flights to Christchurch are seasonal rather than year-round.

Categories


Aviation terminology | Transport in Australia | Transport in New Zealand | Transport in Europe

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