Travellers urged to keep booking on embattled Rex

The administrators for embattled regional airline Rex are urging wary travellers to keep flying with the heavily indebted carrier, despite concerns about its future viability.

Professional services firm EY Australia is working to rescue the five companies in the Rex Group since the airline grounded its Boeing 737 fleet on major metropolitan routes in July.

Rex’s regional flights have continued due to ongoing funding from private equity firm PAG Asia Capital, but the carrier’s long-term future remains unclear amid calls for a federal government bailout.

A Rex aircraft (file image)
Rex has been a critical transport link for regional and remote communities. (Jane Dempster/AAP PHOTOS)

A creditors’ meeting on Friday was told the airline is about $500 million in debt and had launched an asset sale and buyer search in a desperate effort to stay up in the air.

EY partner Samuel Freeman on Monday said travellers could still be confident about booking on Rex while administrators were at the helm.

“We’re saying to Australians, keep booking with Rex, the administrators are in control of the business and are overseeing its operations,” he told ABC TV.

“We have demonstrated since the appointment that the Rex planes are getting people where they need to go to and we’ve secured funding to enable us to continue to do so in the administration period,” he said.

Since administrators took control, Rex had transported more than 20,000 passengers on 600 flights, he said.

The creditors’ meeting was told the airline was in daily talks with government figures in Canberra, who have said they will back Rex as long as it prioritises regional flights.

Nearly 600 jobs at Rex have been axed and about 1000 more are in limbo amid uncertainty on the future of the carrier, which is a critical transport link for regional and remote communities.

The Transport Workers Union, which represents Rex workers, wants the federal government to take an equity stake in the airline to secure at-risk jobs and shore up regional transport links.

Asked about Rex workers getting what they were owed, Mr Freeman said he expected the value of the airline would be “maximised” in a sale and employee entitlements would be addressed in that process.

A second creditors’ meeting, yet to be scheduled, will include a vote on whether to return the Rex companies to the existing board, place them under a deed of company arrangement or liquidate.

The airline got into financial distress after an aggressive move in 2021 to compete on key capital-city routes against majors Qantas and Virgin Australia.

Other contributors were a shortage of pilots that created “sub-optimal fleet utilisation”, supply chain issues and maintenance problems, according to the administrators.

The airline operates a fleet of ageing Saab 340 aircraft on regional routes.

Formed in 2002, Rex is Australia’s largest independent regional airline and makes about 1050 flights a week on 45 routes

This post was originally published on Michael West.