Air Niugini Fokker F100, 24 June 2015:First flight's landing in Vanuatu from Port Moresby [AirClips]
Air Niugini Limited is the national airline of
Papua New Guinea, based in
Air Niugini House on the property of
Jacksons International Airport,
Port Moresby. It operates a domestic network from Port Moresby and Lae, as well as international services in
Asia,
Oceania, and
Australia. Its main base is Jacksons International Airport.
Niugini is the Tok Pisin word for
New Guinea. The airline was established in
November 1973 as the national airline of Papua New Guinea with the government holding 60% of the shares,
Ansett (16%), Qantas (12%) and
Trans Australia Airlines (
TAA) (12%). It started as an exclusively domestic carrier; however it expanded to offer international services shortly thereafter. In founding the airline, the government aimed to encourage regional development in a country without an extensive road network. The airline was established using
DC-3 and
Fokker F27 aircraft.
International services commenced very early on in the history of the airline with a leased
Boeing 720 from
6 February 1976 to
2 February 1977. This was later replaced with a
Boeing 707 purchased from Qantas. During the late
1970s, internal services were performed by a combination of
Fokker F28 jet and Fokker F27 turbo-prop aircraft. By the end of
1975 Air Niugini leased
Boeing 727-200 type aircraft from Ansett and TAA to serve routes to
Brisbane. The airline also acquired a lease of a Boeing 707 from Qantas to commence a weekly service to
Manila and
Hong Kong. In 1976, the government bought out the Qantas and TAA holdings and in
1980 acquired the Ansett shares to make the airline wholly government owned. The fleet of F-27s was phased out in the early
1980s with the introduction of the newly developed de Havilland
Canada Dash 7 four-engine turbo-prop.
In
1979, Air Niugini opened routes to
Honolulu and to
Singapore via
Jakarta. That same year, new facilities were opened at
Jacksons Airport and new
Sales Offices opened in Hong Kong,
Tokyo,
Europe and the
United States. Air Niugini operated their Boeing 707 from
Auckland to Hong Kong via Port Moresby in a tripartite agreement with
Air New Zealand and
Cathay Pacific. This service ran from
1981 to
1985.
In
1984, the airline replaced the two Boeing 707 aircraft with an
Airbus A300 on lease from TAA. This was replaced several years later with two Airbus A310s as the carrier expanded to offer flights principally between
Australian Eastern capital cities and destinations in Asia such as Singapore and Manila via their hub Port Moresby.
The airline endured considerable hardships in the
1990s, with unrest in
Bougainville and a volcanic eruption in
Rabaul destabilising the company's busiest domestic services. The
Asian currency crisis also made an impact, with Air Niugini posting financial losses during this decade.
The government of Papua New Guinea responded by cutting jobs from the airline, suppressing wages, as well as opening offices in Asia and Europe in an attempt at having the airline run profitably. The reforms bore fruit by
2003, with the airline posting a profit of
US$15.8 million for that year.
A
Boeing 767 was acquired in
August 2002, replacing the Airbus aircraft, and was used to offer expanded international services. Combined with aggressive pricing, this made it the most competitively priced airline on many of its routes. A sharing agreement still exists with Qantas in which that airline buys "blocks" of seats on Air Niugini's flights between Port Moresby and Australia.
The financial turnaround seems to have stymied pressure from various sectors, including the
IMF and the
Australian Government, to privatise the national carrier. The
PNG government has voiced concerns that privatisation would jeopardise domestic routes that provide a vital service to regional people and encourage economic development, but which fail to realise a profit.
From
September 2004, Fokker F100s have been introduced to start to replace the aging Fokker F28 aircraft that are used on domestic routes, the daily
Cairns service, and the twice a week service to
Honiara in the
Solomon Islands.
In
March 2006,
Transport and
Civil Aviation Minister Don Polye announced an open air policy, which would allow other airlines to fly international routes into and from Papua New Guinea. The policy will take effect in
2007.
On
December 2007, Air Niugini returned its leased Boeing 767 aircraft to its owners, Air New Zealand. The airline briefly entered a wet lease arrangement with
Viva Macau before taking up a lease with Icelandair for a
Boeing 767-300ER and a Boeing 757-200W.
The 757 was returned in
March 2011 and replaced with two additional 767-300ER aircraft.
On 18
April 2008, flights commenced on the Sydney-Port Moresby route initially using leased
Embraer 190 aircraft leased from SkyAirWorld of Australia.