FILE PHOTO: An Air New Zealand Boeing 777-300ER plane taxis after landing at Kingsford Smith International Airport in Sydney, Australia, February 22, 2018. REUTERS/Daniel Munoz/File photo
FILE PHOTO: An Air New Zealand Boeing 777-300ER plane taxis after landing at Kingsford Smith International Airport in Sydney, Australia, February 22, 2018. REUTERS/Daniel Munoz/File photo
Home » News » Business & Economy » Air New Zealand plans for elevated fuel costs into 2027
Business & Economy

Air New Zealand plans for elevated fuel costs into 2027

By Rajesh Kumar Singh

RIO DE JANEIRO, June 6 (Reuters) – Air New Zealand has offset only 25% to 40% of the hit from higher fuel prices through hedging and fare increases, Chief Executive Nikhil Ravishankar told Reuters on Saturday, as the carrier plans for elevated fuel costs going into its 2027 financial year.

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The airline is planning around $150 per barrel jet fuel out of the Singapore Jet Index, Ravishankar said on the sidelines of the International Air Transport Association’s annual meeting in Rio de Janeiro. Air New Zealand is not facing fuel supply shortages, he said, but the price shock remains the main challenge.

The airline has already imposed two rounds of fare increases and could look at further tactical hikes in markets where demand remains resilient, Ravishankar said.

“You can’t just infinitely keep raising prices. The market will respond and demand will soften and then you fly less,” he said in an interview.

Ravishankar said Air New Zealand did not expect to tap markets for more liquidity, arguing that the carrier’s balance sheet and pool of unencumbered aircraft assets gave it room to withstand elevated fuel prices for an extended period.

If fuel prices stayed elevated, the airline would use a combination of cost cuts, supplier negotiations, fare increases and capacity reductions, he said.

Air New Zealand is also recovering from engine problems and aircraft delivery delays that at one point grounded up to 20% of its fleet. Ravishankar said that had fallen to less than 5%, with most aircraft expected to be back flying over the next two to three months.

Compensation from Boeing, Rolls-Royce and Pratt & Whitney had helped but had only partially offset the economic damage, he said.

(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh in Rio de Janeiro)

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By Rajesh Kumar Singh | Reuters | © Copyright Thomson Reuters 2026.

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