Airport of Thailand (AoT) expects revenue bump for next year

Airports of Thailand Plc (AoT), the operator of six international airports, expects revenue to rise healthily once its 220-billion-baht expansion plan is completed next year.
The company is on track with its five-year investment plan that started in 2015. It is scheduled to be completed next year, expanding Suvarnabhumi, Don Mueang, Phuket, Chiang Mai, Mae Fah Luang-Chiang Rai and Hat Yai airports.

Continued increases in tourist arrivals is another positive factor for the agency. Moreover, the removal of the red flag given by the International Civil Aviation Organization last October has attracted more international airlines to operate service in Thailand, serving the growing tourist numbers.

Foreign passengers generate more income because each is required to pay 700 baht for a passenger service charge per flight. Domestic passengers pay 100 baht per flight.

The new terminal at Suvarnabhumi airport is scheduled to be completed next year and fully operational by 2020. The terminal will help increase passenger capacity from 45 million per year to 90 million at the airport.

This year the government approved AoT building two new airports and managing and expanding four existing airports owned by the Airports Department. The two new airports are Chiang Mai Airport 2, which will be located in Lamphun province, and Phuket Airport 2, located in Phangnga province.

There are four other local airports managed by AoT: those in Tak, Sakon Nakhon, Chumphon and Udon Thani provinces.

Udon Thani airport is being pushed to become a new regional gateway, linking with neighbouring countries, said Mr Nitinai.

AoT also earns income from duty-free concession fees, a segment that is now dominated by King Power International Group. He said AoT expects to finalise concession bidding for duty-free business within the next few months. New operators are likely to sign contracts with AoT within this year, two years before King Power’s duty-free shop concession contract ends.

Source: Bangkok Post

India: GVK in talks for stake sale in Mumbai International Airport

The GVK group is planning to sell a minority stake in its airports holding company and has held talks with Qatar Investment Authority (QIA), AMP Capital and Global Infrastructure Partners as well as Canada Pension Plan Investment Board among other global investors.

GVK, via GVK Airport Holding, owns 50.5% in Mumbai International Airport Ltd. (MIAL), the consortium that runs the existing airport in the city and has won the bid for developing a new Rs 16,000 crore airport project, Navi Mumbai International Airport Ltd (NMIAL) on its outskirts. MIAL’s other stakeholders are Airports Company South Africa (10%), Bidvest (13.5%) and the state-run Airports Authority of India (26%).

Mumbai airport is India’s second busiest and also its most congested. It handled 48.50 million passengers in 2017-18 and holds the record for being the world’s busiest single-runway airport.

NMIAL is seen as a critical alternative to the saturated existing airport. It will be built on 1,160 hectares of land in phases and will eventually cater to 60 million passengers per year. The initial concession period is 30 years from the appointed date and is extendable for a further 10 years.
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The deal, if it fructifies, will be GVK’s second divestment in its airports business. The conglomerate with interests also in energy, power, road infrastructure and mining last year sold its complete stake in the Bengaluru airport, India’s third busiest, to Fairfax Holdings owned by Prem Watsa, a Canadian-born billionaire investor of Indian origin. Fairfax bought the 54% stake in several tranches investing a total of $400 million, its largest in India yet.

Source: The Economic Times

Chennai: New terminal work at airport to begin soon

The Airports Authority of India (AAI) may start the construction of an integrated terminal to handle domestic and international passengers by mid-July or end of the month. With this, the authorities will start a major expansion work of the airport, almost five years after the new domestic and international terminals were commissioned in 2013.
The new building, being planned as part of phase 2 expansion of the airport, will cost 2,000 crore and is expected to be ready in four years.
Demolition of the old domestic terminal began in March and is nearing completion. The AAI has, meanwhile, finalised a contractor for building the new terminal. The integrated terminal will increase peak-hour passenger capacity by 1,000 and 4,800 on the domestic and international wings. The international terminal will be allotted more space as peak-hour footfall is expected to be at least 7,000. Plans under phase 2 development were that the AAI will demolish the old terminal and construct a new integrated one, build a multi-level car park on either side of the airport metro rail station, straighten a taxiway before the cargo terminal and build a few rapid exit taxiways.

Source: The Times of India

Bucharest South Airport should have two terminals and a capacity of 30 million passengers per year

The government wants to build a new airport in the South of Bucharest that should have at least two terminals and a capacity of 30 million passengers per year. Executive spokesman Nelu Barbu provided details about the eight strategic investments, including the airport.

“The size of the airport will have to be designed for traffic of approximately 30 million passengers on a surface of no more than 600 hectares and be equipped with at least two terminals. As soon as such areas are identified by the local authorities, these authorities can participate in setting up the project company,” explained Nelu Barbu.

Talks about a new airport near the Capital city, located in the south of town, are not new, but it never finalized in a project. The govern is intending to find a private company to create a public-private partnership, a company that would have the responsibility to carry out the project. But it will not be easy to find such a partner and it didn’t even start finding the area where an airport can be built.

Bucharest South Airport, could become a transit point for passengers traveling to Asia, Pacific, but also to Europe or America.

Source: BR Business Review