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Newcastle Airport's transformation is a golden opportunity for region

Newcastle Airport's transformation is a golden opportunity for region

The Advertiser31-05-2025

Newcastle Airport has come a long way since commercial flights began operating out of a tin shed in 1948.
It is not among the signature rural or remote airfields that provide limited, but essential, services for emergency, flight training, charter flights and industry. Newcastle Airport instead services a catchment of more than 1.1 million, connecting 1.2 million passengers a year to capital cities, regional centres and tourism hotspots. It directly supports more than 5700 local jobs and generates $1 billion in economic impact.
With scale comes complexity and risk, and the airport has a corporate structure, board and a big balance sheet. The reporting that readers have seen provides insights into governance and risk management frameworks in action.
As a government-owned asset, the airport also reports to councils under frameworks mandated by the Local Government Act. Aviation is one of the most regulated sectors in Australia, bringing heavy compliance and reporting obligations. Add requirements under the Corporations Act, Newcastle Airport is not a business that can avoid transparency and accountability: to shareholders, markets, regulators or the public.
As the airport expands, so do the obligations, revenue and operational costs, requiring more ambitious investment to maintain standards and competitiveness. More flights to more destinations, more competition on airfares, more freight options for NSW suppliers, more jobs, and the option to avoid driving to Sydney or risk a domestic connection to another city for an international flight. Newcastle Airport is advanced in plans to be the airport we deserve, with investment in an international runway and terminal. This week, direct flights to Perth were announced, providing one-stop links to London and Europe.
No different to strategies progressed by most major airports, the airport is investing in property development that diversifies services and income. A 2023 Deloitte Access Economics report shows employment and economic contribution from Australian airport precincts eclipsing that of core aviation activities. Even land owners near Newcastle Airport get the opportunity, as complementary development proposals are pursued.
Air freight is also an economic driver, comprising 13 per cent of Australian exports. We expect the airport to review opportunities to build this, as they have in partnership with the Joint Organisation of Councils in the proposal for an air cargo terminal.
The region has much more at stake in the success of the airport than just securing that coveted flight to Singapore or the US, made possible by airport upgrades. We are a $91 billion economy entering structural adjustment as the contribution of coal declines, with 55,000 jobs at risk over the next 15 years. These government figures are not modelled on demand for coal. They reflect the supply-side hard baked into our future, including dates for the closure of coal-fired power stations and planning approvals for mines. You can hear the urgency from Upper Hunter mayors as they join advocacy for investment in the airport as part of the solution.
When developments in the airport precinct, international upgrades and a cargo terminal are realised, these collectively will replace more than 16 per cent of the predicted jobs deficit. This is not a game for our region. Real jobs, communities and economic security are at risk.
The committee is advocating hard with government and business for focus and investment, including the airport, positioning the region as grown-up, unified, professional and a sure bet. But the expression of local politics on airport matters shows that narrower interests are at play. In an own goal for the Hunter, this has bled into federal politics, with the Opposition threatening to air the matter in Senate Estimates. This is damaging negotiations on airport deals to secure the partnerships we need. The entire region, not just Newcastle, has an interest in the success of the airport.
With the new terminal opening within months, now is the time to back-in one of the region's most important economic engines. Efforts should be focused on how to increase the feasibility of this generational opportunity and maximise benefits for Hunter residents, businesses and the economy.
Newcastle Airport has come a long way since commercial flights began operating out of a tin shed in 1948.
It is not among the signature rural or remote airfields that provide limited, but essential, services for emergency, flight training, charter flights and industry. Newcastle Airport instead services a catchment of more than 1.1 million, connecting 1.2 million passengers a year to capital cities, regional centres and tourism hotspots. It directly supports more than 5700 local jobs and generates $1 billion in economic impact.
With scale comes complexity and risk, and the airport has a corporate structure, board and a big balance sheet. The reporting that readers have seen provides insights into governance and risk management frameworks in action.
As a government-owned asset, the airport also reports to councils under frameworks mandated by the Local Government Act. Aviation is one of the most regulated sectors in Australia, bringing heavy compliance and reporting obligations. Add requirements under the Corporations Act, Newcastle Airport is not a business that can avoid transparency and accountability: to shareholders, markets, regulators or the public.
As the airport expands, so do the obligations, revenue and operational costs, requiring more ambitious investment to maintain standards and competitiveness. More flights to more destinations, more competition on airfares, more freight options for NSW suppliers, more jobs, and the option to avoid driving to Sydney or risk a domestic connection to another city for an international flight. Newcastle Airport is advanced in plans to be the airport we deserve, with investment in an international runway and terminal. This week, direct flights to Perth were announced, providing one-stop links to London and Europe.
No different to strategies progressed by most major airports, the airport is investing in property development that diversifies services and income. A 2023 Deloitte Access Economics report shows employment and economic contribution from Australian airport precincts eclipsing that of core aviation activities. Even land owners near Newcastle Airport get the opportunity, as complementary development proposals are pursued.
Air freight is also an economic driver, comprising 13 per cent of Australian exports. We expect the airport to review opportunities to build this, as they have in partnership with the Joint Organisation of Councils in the proposal for an air cargo terminal.
The region has much more at stake in the success of the airport than just securing that coveted flight to Singapore or the US, made possible by airport upgrades. We are a $91 billion economy entering structural adjustment as the contribution of coal declines, with 55,000 jobs at risk over the next 15 years. These government figures are not modelled on demand for coal. They reflect the supply-side hard baked into our future, including dates for the closure of coal-fired power stations and planning approvals for mines. You can hear the urgency from Upper Hunter mayors as they join advocacy for investment in the airport as part of the solution.
When developments in the airport precinct, international upgrades and a cargo terminal are realised, these collectively will replace more than 16 per cent of the predicted jobs deficit. This is not a game for our region. Real jobs, communities and economic security are at risk.
The committee is advocating hard with government and business for focus and investment, including the airport, positioning the region as grown-up, unified, professional and a sure bet. But the expression of local politics on airport matters shows that narrower interests are at play. In an own goal for the Hunter, this has bled into federal politics, with the Opposition threatening to air the matter in Senate Estimates. This is damaging negotiations on airport deals to secure the partnerships we need. The entire region, not just Newcastle, has an interest in the success of the airport.
With the new terminal opening within months, now is the time to back-in one of the region's most important economic engines. Efforts should be focused on how to increase the feasibility of this generational opportunity and maximise benefits for Hunter residents, businesses and the economy.
Newcastle Airport has come a long way since commercial flights began operating out of a tin shed in 1948.
It is not among the signature rural or remote airfields that provide limited, but essential, services for emergency, flight training, charter flights and industry. Newcastle Airport instead services a catchment of more than 1.1 million, connecting 1.2 million passengers a year to capital cities, regional centres and tourism hotspots. It directly supports more than 5700 local jobs and generates $1 billion in economic impact.
With scale comes complexity and risk, and the airport has a corporate structure, board and a big balance sheet. The reporting that readers have seen provides insights into governance and risk management frameworks in action.
As a government-owned asset, the airport also reports to councils under frameworks mandated by the Local Government Act. Aviation is one of the most regulated sectors in Australia, bringing heavy compliance and reporting obligations. Add requirements under the Corporations Act, Newcastle Airport is not a business that can avoid transparency and accountability: to shareholders, markets, regulators or the public.
As the airport expands, so do the obligations, revenue and operational costs, requiring more ambitious investment to maintain standards and competitiveness. More flights to more destinations, more competition on airfares, more freight options for NSW suppliers, more jobs, and the option to avoid driving to Sydney or risk a domestic connection to another city for an international flight. Newcastle Airport is advanced in plans to be the airport we deserve, with investment in an international runway and terminal. This week, direct flights to Perth were announced, providing one-stop links to London and Europe.
No different to strategies progressed by most major airports, the airport is investing in property development that diversifies services and income. A 2023 Deloitte Access Economics report shows employment and economic contribution from Australian airport precincts eclipsing that of core aviation activities. Even land owners near Newcastle Airport get the opportunity, as complementary development proposals are pursued.
Air freight is also an economic driver, comprising 13 per cent of Australian exports. We expect the airport to review opportunities to build this, as they have in partnership with the Joint Organisation of Councils in the proposal for an air cargo terminal.
The region has much more at stake in the success of the airport than just securing that coveted flight to Singapore or the US, made possible by airport upgrades. We are a $91 billion economy entering structural adjustment as the contribution of coal declines, with 55,000 jobs at risk over the next 15 years. These government figures are not modelled on demand for coal. They reflect the supply-side hard baked into our future, including dates for the closure of coal-fired power stations and planning approvals for mines. You can hear the urgency from Upper Hunter mayors as they join advocacy for investment in the airport as part of the solution.
When developments in the airport precinct, international upgrades and a cargo terminal are realised, these collectively will replace more than 16 per cent of the predicted jobs deficit. This is not a game for our region. Real jobs, communities and economic security are at risk.
The committee is advocating hard with government and business for focus and investment, including the airport, positioning the region as grown-up, unified, professional and a sure bet. But the expression of local politics on airport matters shows that narrower interests are at play. In an own goal for the Hunter, this has bled into federal politics, with the Opposition threatening to air the matter in Senate Estimates. This is damaging negotiations on airport deals to secure the partnerships we need. The entire region, not just Newcastle, has an interest in the success of the airport.
With the new terminal opening within months, now is the time to back-in one of the region's most important economic engines. Efforts should be focused on how to increase the feasibility of this generational opportunity and maximise benefits for Hunter residents, businesses and the economy.
Newcastle Airport has come a long way since commercial flights began operating out of a tin shed in 1948.
It is not among the signature rural or remote airfields that provide limited, but essential, services for emergency, flight training, charter flights and industry. Newcastle Airport instead services a catchment of more than 1.1 million, connecting 1.2 million passengers a year to capital cities, regional centres and tourism hotspots. It directly supports more than 5700 local jobs and generates $1 billion in economic impact.
With scale comes complexity and risk, and the airport has a corporate structure, board and a big balance sheet. The reporting that readers have seen provides insights into governance and risk management frameworks in action.
As a government-owned asset, the airport also reports to councils under frameworks mandated by the Local Government Act. Aviation is one of the most regulated sectors in Australia, bringing heavy compliance and reporting obligations. Add requirements under the Corporations Act, Newcastle Airport is not a business that can avoid transparency and accountability: to shareholders, markets, regulators or the public.
As the airport expands, so do the obligations, revenue and operational costs, requiring more ambitious investment to maintain standards and competitiveness. More flights to more destinations, more competition on airfares, more freight options for NSW suppliers, more jobs, and the option to avoid driving to Sydney or risk a domestic connection to another city for an international flight. Newcastle Airport is advanced in plans to be the airport we deserve, with investment in an international runway and terminal. This week, direct flights to Perth were announced, providing one-stop links to London and Europe.
No different to strategies progressed by most major airports, the airport is investing in property development that diversifies services and income. A 2023 Deloitte Access Economics report shows employment and economic contribution from Australian airport precincts eclipsing that of core aviation activities. Even land owners near Newcastle Airport get the opportunity, as complementary development proposals are pursued.
Air freight is also an economic driver, comprising 13 per cent of Australian exports. We expect the airport to review opportunities to build this, as they have in partnership with the Joint Organisation of Councils in the proposal for an air cargo terminal.
The region has much more at stake in the success of the airport than just securing that coveted flight to Singapore or the US, made possible by airport upgrades. We are a $91 billion economy entering structural adjustment as the contribution of coal declines, with 55,000 jobs at risk over the next 15 years. These government figures are not modelled on demand for coal. They reflect the supply-side hard baked into our future, including dates for the closure of coal-fired power stations and planning approvals for mines. You can hear the urgency from Upper Hunter mayors as they join advocacy for investment in the airport as part of the solution.
When developments in the airport precinct, international upgrades and a cargo terminal are realised, these collectively will replace more than 16 per cent of the predicted jobs deficit. This is not a game for our region. Real jobs, communities and economic security are at risk.
The committee is advocating hard with government and business for focus and investment, including the airport, positioning the region as grown-up, unified, professional and a sure bet. But the expression of local politics on airport matters shows that narrower interests are at play. In an own goal for the Hunter, this has bled into federal politics, with the Opposition threatening to air the matter in Senate Estimates. This is damaging negotiations on airport deals to secure the partnerships we need. The entire region, not just Newcastle, has an interest in the success of the airport.
With the new terminal opening within months, now is the time to back-in one of the region's most important economic engines. Efforts should be focused on how to increase the feasibility of this generational opportunity and maximise benefits for Hunter residents, businesses and the economy.

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