Virgin Australia has welcomed the Australian Government's push to change ownership laws for Qantas that stops short of a bigger short-term prize - a standby debt facility to reduce borrowing costs for the troubled national carrier.
The war of words between the two airlines continued yesterday with Qantas again calling for "immediate action to address the imbalance that has been allowed to persist for almost two years - namely Virgin's unlimited ability to access foreign capital from government-owned airlines to fund a loss-making strategy against Qantas".
On Friday, Virgin released its half-year results which showed it had suffered a net loss of A$83.7 million ($89.28 million) - which, given its size, is on a par with Qantas which announced a loss of A$252 million the day before - with both airlines blaming the bitter fight for the domestic market for contributing to losses.
Qantas has been pushing for a government debt guarantee and in its statement yesterday alluded to political challenges to opening up Qantas to new owners and said it "would expect the Government and the Parliament to consider alternative measures to balance the unlevel playing field in Australian aviation".
The airline did not specify what it wanted but has previously discussed a government standby debt facility - should it need it - to help boost its credit rating from junk status.