It is part of the Australian
carrier's plans to reduce costs by A$2bn ($1.8bn; £1bn) over the next three
years.
The cuts were announced
alongside an underlying pre-tax loss of A$252m for the six months to the end of
December.
The airline, which also
plans to reduce its fleet by more than 50 aircraft, said it faced tough
competition in both international and domestic operations.
Qantas chief executive Alan
Joyce said he would be discussing the job cuts
with trade unions on Friday.
In addition to the
redundancies, the airline will also be making changes to its fleet.
At a press conference
following the earnings results, Mr Joyce said Qantas would defer eight
remaining Airbus A380 aircraft on order.
It will also defer the
receipt of three Boeing's 787 Dreamliner jets which had been ordered for its
budget arm Jetstar.
In a statement, Qantas chief
executive Alan Joyce said the airline was facing "some of the toughest
conditions... it has ever seen" and that it needed to take actions
"unprecedented in scope and depth" to cope with changes in the Australian
aviation industry.
Qantas has been trying to
convince the Australian government that it deserves financial backing, and that
rules limiting foreign ownership of the airline to 49% should be relaxed to
encourage overseas investment.
It claims it is at a
disadvantage because domestic rival Virgin Australia is largely owned by three
government-backed operators - Air New Zealand, Etihad and Singapore Airlines.
"The Australian
domestic market has been distorted by current Australian aviation policy,"
Mr Joyce said.
"Qantas has been
undertaking its biggest ever transformation over the past four years, cutting
comparable unit costs by 19%, but this is not enough for the circumstances we
face now."
The airline's shares sank by
as much as 7% at the start of trading in Australia after the earnings
announcement was made, and closed down 9% at A$1.16.
The airline warned in
December that losses in the first half could reach A$300m, citing "immense
challenges" from record fuel costs, a strong Australian dollar and fierce
competition.
Not long after that earnings
alert, two ratings agencies - Moody's and Standard & Poor's - downgraded
the airline's credit rating to below investment grade.
BBC Business
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