Google AI
The Times Australia
Business and Money

Albanese government looking to acquire Rex Airlines if buyer can’t be found

  • Written by: Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra



The Albanese government will on Wednesday announce it is willing, as a last resort, to purchase the collapsed Rex Airlines, in its latest bid to prop up aviation services to regional and remote areas.

As the administrators work on the second attempt to sell Rex, the  government will say that, in the first instance, it will work with shortlisted bidders on potential support to maximise the prospects of a sale. The initial attempt to sell Rex failed last year.

What support will be offered  will be conditional on bidders committing to provide an “ongoing, reasonable level of service to regional and remote communities”. Assistance must also represent value for taxpayers’ money and there would have to be assurances from the potential buyer of good governance.

While the government is not a bidder in the sale process now underway and hopes that will be successful, if there is no result, it will go down an alternative route.

“In the event there is no sale, the Albanese government will undertake necessary work, in consultation with relevant state governments, on contingency options, including preparations necessary for potential Commonwealth acquisition.”

The government is also providing an extension to the exemption from the “use it or lose it” test for REX regional flight slots at Sydney airport. This will ensure its access to those slots until October 24 next year.

REX went into voluntary administration last year. An attempt (now abandoned) to compete on capital city routes had proved disastrous for it.

The Federal government has provided it with extensive support to keep it in the air on regional routes while its future is being determined.

This has included $80 million in a loan to the administrator to keep regional flights operating until June 30, as well as a buyout of $50 million debt from its biggest creditor, PAGAC Regulus Holdings Limited. The government is now Rex’s largest creditor.

Prime Minister Albanese said: “We are working collaboratively with the administrators of REX to ensure that regional services continue beyond June 2025, including looking at what support the Commonwealth can provide.

"Regional Australians can be assured that our government will continue to fight to ensure these regional airfare remain available.”

Transport minister Catherine King said: “When markets fail or struggle to deliver for regional communities the government has a role to ensure people do not miss out on opportunities, education and critical connections.”

When speaking about the future of the airline last month, opposition transport spokeswoman Bridget McKenzie declined to say whether the Coalition would support nationalisation of Rex.

Until the 1990s the federal government owned Qantas and one of the two major domestic airlines.

Read more https://theconversation.com/albanese-government-looking-to-acquire-rex-airlines-if-buyer-cant-be-found-249594

Business Times

Where Our Batteries Come From: Battery making is big business

Batteries are now so deeply embedded in modern life that most people rarely stop to think about them. They power: elect...

Commonwealth Bank’s Share Price Rollercoaster

What It Reveals About Confidence in Australia’s Banking Sector For years, the share price of Commonwealth Bank has been vi...

How Will Businesses Large, Small and Startups Adapt to the New Re…

Australian businesses are entering what many executives, investors and entrepreneurs increasingly d...

The Times Features

Why every drop counts

Accurate water measurement and confidence in Sustainable Diversion Limits (SDLs) are essential to ...

Dining Out Is Expensive. Buying High Quality Meat and F…

For many Australians, dining out has quietly shifted from a weekly habit to an occasional indulgen...

REFLECTIONS: A Legacy in the Rain at Carla Zampatti AFW…

Words & Photography by Cesar Ocampo There is a specific kind of magic that happens when high fa...

Where Our Batteries Come From: Battery making is big bu…

Batteries are now so deeply embedded in modern life that most people rarely stop to think about th...

Did Trump Secure China’s Assistance to Protect Middle E…

As tensions in the Middle East continue to threaten global energy markets, a new geopolitical ques...

China and America: Trump Tried to Be Nice. Did It Work?

For years the relationship between the United States and China has resembled a slow-moving collisi...

Since the Budget: How the Real Estate Industry Reacted

Australia’s real estate industry has reacted to the federal budget with a mixture of optimism, cau...

Budget Holidays in Australia: How to Travel More and Sp…

For many Australians, the idea of a holiday now comes with a difficult question: can we still affo...

Street Side Medics Calls for Canberra Clinic Volunteers

Street Side Medics – a not-for-profit, GP-led mobile medical service dedicated to people experienc...