14 Nov 2024

Air NZ and Qantas cancel flights to Bali over volcanic ash after eruption

9:46 am on 14 November 2024
Residents watch the eruption of Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki from Eputobi village in Titihena, East Nusa Tenggara, on November 8, 2024. (Photo by Bayu ISMOYO and ARNOLD WELIANTO / AFP)

Residents watch the eruption of Mount Lewotobi's Laki Laki from Eputobi village in East Nusa Tenggara, 8 November, 2024. Photo: BAYU ISMOYO and ARNOLD WELIANTO / AFP

Air New Zealand and Qantas are among several airlines to who have cancelled flights to and from Bali due to volcanic ash blanketing flight paths.

Mount Lewotobi's Laki-laki volcano in Indonesia erupted on 3 November, killing at least 10 people.

It erupted shortly before midnight local time, sending lava and rocks flying, with some hitting villages 4km from the crater, burning homes.

The Indonesian Center for Volcanology and Geological Disaster Mitigation (PVMG) said at the time it was clearing a 7km around the eruption, displacing thousands of people.

Since that initial eruption, the volcano has erupted repeatedly.

It's spewing ash some 8000m into the air which has become a problem for airlines.

Air New Zealand said volcanic ash conditions on the flight path from Auckland to Denpasar in Bali caused the cancellation of NZ62 and NZ63 on Wednesday.

"The safety of our people and our customers is our utmost priority, and we will continue to monitor the movement of the ash over the coming days and its impact to operation of our flights," Chief Operating Officer Alex Marren said.

She said customers would be reaccommodated on the next available Air New Zealand service.

Qantas was urging customers to reconsider all non-essential travel to Denpasar up to 22 November and said it had additional flexibility for those who no longer wished to travel.

On its website, it said the "additional flexibility" included fee-free refunds, travel credit or a date change.

The Australian airline has confirmed it cancelled flights to and from Denpasar on Tuesday and Wednesday this week.

In a statement, it said its meteorology team was closely monitoring the situation, and customers would be contacted directly if their Thursday service was affected by 12pm NZT.

Qantas said it was continuing to regularly update customers via its website.

Bookings for flights to and from Denpasar were unavailable until 18 November, to allow the airline to accommodate its existing bookings, Qantas said.

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