Flights are starting to resume from southern Australia after two days of cancellations due to ash
Australian
carrier Qantas has agreed on a settlement with engine-maker Rolls-Royce
over a mid-air blast incident and the grounding of the Qantas fleet of
superjumbos.
Rolls-Royce will pay 95m Australian dollars ($100m; £62m), said Qantas.
Qantas also reported a pre-tax profit for the year ending 30 June 2011 in the range of A$500-550m.
The airline has been hit by disruptions due to ash erupting from a volcano in Chile for the second time this year.
The settlement is in connection with a Qantas A380 plane that
suffered an uncontained engine explosion shortly after take off from
Singapore on November 4 last year.
The engine was a Rolls-Royce manufactured Trent-900.
Qantas initially grounded all six of its Airbus superjumbos after the blast.
The airline continued to face problems this year, first from
the floods and cyclones in Queensland, and more recently from an ash
cloud.
Flights are starting to resume on Wednesday from airports in
southern Australia, after two days of cancellations left thousands
stranded.
Qantas estimates that, as of Monday 20 June, disruption caused by the volcanic ash will have cost the company A$21m.
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