A spokesperson for Australia’s Infrastructure and Transport Minister, Darren Chester, has confirmed to SBS News the government is not considering following the US or the UK in implementing an in-flight ban on large and medium electronic devices.
Earlier this week the US and UK confirmed devices larger than a mobile phone would be banned from carry-on luggage in flights from several Middle Eastern and North African countries.
France and Canada are reportedly considering similar restrictions.
Related reading
The growing list of terror-linked flight restrictions
But Dr Clive Williams, a member of International Association of Bomb Technicians and Investigators and a former Australian Defence Intelligence staffer, said he was not surprised Australia wasn’t looking to follow.
“I think it would just be a nuisance for travellers, and it’s not a problem here,” he told SBS News.
“Most of the incidents on aircraft have been on aircraft going to the US.”
While Australia was not enough of a target to justify a ban, he said there was a good reason for the US to be cautious.
“I was a bit surprised that they’d taken so long to getting around to doing it, to be honest,” Dr Williams said.
The ban is likely a response to a February 2016 incident in Somalia in which a terrorist blew a hole in a plane’s fuselage mid-flight with a device which appears to have been concealed as a laptop, he said.
Related reading
What we know about the US, UK electronics flight ban
In that case, the bomber was able to avoid security screening of the explosive device.
“People in the bomb community have been concerned about laptops and devices which could have a bomb in them for a while,” Dr Williams said.
“I think that the reason [the bans] focus on those countries is the lax security and the increased chances of being able to smuggle a device onboard.”
Numerous airlines offer direct flights between Australia and Middle Eastern transport hubs.
Watch: Reactions to the US's electronics ban