New airport terminal at Honiara International Airport, Solomon Islands

Japan unveiled the plan yesterday in Honiara during the signing of the Grant Agreement for the improvement of the Honiara International Airport project.

The airport upgrading project, which is expected to start early next year, will cost four billion three hundred and sixty-four million Japanese Yen (4,364,000,000) or around SBD$290 million.

Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) Chief Representative Takashi Toyama said if construction work starts early next year, it should take around 31 months to complete.

Mr Toyama said this new terminal arrangement is expected to boo

st the convenience of passengers between international and domestic terminal and to contribute to the growth of the tourism industry.

Honiara International Airport formerly known as Henderson Field, is an airport on Guadalcanal Island in the Solomon Islands. It is the only international airport in the Solomon Islands and is located 8 kilometers  from the capital Honiara.

Chile fine-tuning airport development plan

Chile is readying a strategy to expand its airport infrastructure in order to deal with rapidly increasing passenger traffic, a plan that includes renewing the concessions for several airports and modernizing secondary domestic terminals.

During a conference held at the engineers’ guild in Santiago Claudia Carvallo, advisor to the public works ministry’s (MOP) airport division, said the government plans to tender studies to determine the infrastructure shortfalls in the airport network.

The first of the studies will be tendered at the end of this year, and will cover the airports of the central-south zone (Los Ángeles, Chillán, Pucón, Valdivia, Araucanía and Concepción).

«The idea behind these studies is to detect infrastructure deficits for commercial operations, as there aren’t commercial operation at Los Ángeles, Chillán and Pucón, but these are destinations that low cost airlines are interested in,» Carvallo said.

Another part of the plan is the development of airport master plans. The official said that the drawing up of these plans will also be tendered by zones, with the first bidding process starting by year-end.

On concessions, the government is looking to «jumpstart public-private alliances» and that, for the first time in Chile, authorities are mulling tendering concession packages that would include more than one airport, according to Carvallo.

MOP is looking at tendering the concessions for the Carlos Ibáñez del Campo(Magallanes region) and Balmaceda (Aysén region) airports as one contract.

Carvallo unveiled the long-term plan for the airports that currently operate under concessions, with the exception of Calama’s El Loa which was not mentioned:

  • Chacalluta (Arica and Parinacota)

2nd concession to be tendered next month.

Budget: US$99mn

Works under new concession: Expansion of airport to 10,000m2. Expansion of aircraft parking space. Expansion of parking lot. New aeronautic complex. Works expected to begin in 2020.

4th concession awarded last year to APORT

Budget: US$60mn

Works under new concession: Expansion of terminal to 20,000m2. Adding 3,000m2 of aeronautic installations.

  • Andrés Savella airport (Antofagasta)

Expansion of airport runway to be executed by MOP instead of concessionaire.

Concessionaire Aport is developing a real state project in the area of the concession. It entails the construction of several installations to give logistical support to the airport. The works will be financed by the concessionaire in exchange of a «small extension» of its contract, Carvallo said. Installations include a new cargo area and a bus terminal.

Preliminary project for 2nd concession to be tendered at the end of this year. This draft will serve as reference for the upcoming concession tender.

New concession to be tendered next year.

MOP ruled out a project to build a new terminal at Tongoy. Carvallo said «both projects are profitable but [the new La Serena concession] is more profitable.»

Works under new concession: Expansion of erminal to 10,000m2.

Concession awarded in 2015 to consortium Nuevo Pudahuel.

Budget: US$650mn

Works in progress. Construction of new 157,000m2 international passenger terminal. Expansion of existing terminal by 9,000m2. Expandiing parking lot. Addition of five boarding bridges.

Carvallo added that the concession has an «investment trigger» in case of the need for further expansions. To that end, MOP is seeking to expropriate 640ha of land.

2nd concession awarded in 2016 to a consortium made of Icafal Construccionesand Icafal Inversiones.

Budget: US$36mn

Works in progress: Expansion of airport surface area to 12,000m2. Works expected to finish next year.

4th concession awarded in February to a consortium made of Sacyr and Agunsa.

Budget: US$35mn

Works under new concession: increasing the airport surface area to 16,000m2. Adding a new boarding bridge. Adding new positions for planes and expanding parking lots. Works are expected to start next year.

Works outside of concession: New runway. MOP plans to tender the design of the runway this year.

  • Balmaceda (Aysén, currently operated by MOP’s airport division)

1st concession planned to be tendered alongside Carlos Ibañez del Campo airport. Tender planned for April 2019.

Budget: US$87mn

Works: Construction of new terminal. Upgrade of existing terminal.

  • Punta Arenas’ Carlos Ibañez del Campo (Magallanes)

3rd concession planned to be tendered alongside Balmaceda airport in April 2019.

Budget: US$90mn

Works under new concession: Expanding terminal to 15,000m2.

MINOR AIRPORTS

Due to the pressure from low cost airlines, Carvallo said that MOP is also planning to improve the infrastructure of smaller airports.

The ministry is planning to tender studies to expand the airports of Viña del Mar and Easter Island (both in Valparaíso region), with the expansion of the latter estimated to cost 55bn pesos (US$86mn). The MOP official said the plan is still under evaluation, as it would demand resources from other ministries.

In the Santiago area, Carvallo said the ongoing construction of the Peldehue civil airfield is 50% complete and is expected to finish in July 2019.

Meanwhile, the airport of Pucón (Araucanía region) will be part of the first infrastructure study to be tendered, as it was considered a priority destination by low cost airline Jet-Smart, along with Viña del Mar, Carvallo said.

Finally, in Los Largos region, MOP will tender a US$32mn project to modernize Mocopulli airport on Chiloé island next year.

When consulted by BNamericas regarding the possibility of reconditioning air bases for commercial use, as was done in Argentina to accommodate low cost airlines, Carvallo said that «the possibility exists, but even so these low cost airlines are more interested in the small airports, because of their location.»

Source: Dirección General Aeronáutica de Chile, BNAméricas

Poland’s new airport to become Central European hub

The Polish Government has approved an act setting out principles and conditions for the preparation, financing and implementation of investments in the construction of the New Central Polish Airport, near the city of Łódź.

Building on Poland’s location between east and west, the airport could become a hub for millions of passengers from Poland and far beyond.

The airport will take over from Warsaw’s Chopin Airport, the largest airport in Central and Eastern Europe in terms of passengers. Traffic at the airport has been rising, increasing by one-quarter between July 2016 and July 2017. In 2017, it served 15.75 million passengers, slightly more than Prague’s Vaclav Havel Airport, according to Airports Council International. As traffic continues to rise, the airport’s capacity will be met in a few years’ time.

To meet that capacity, the government plans to build a new airport between Warsaw and Łódź, in central Poland. One of the municipalities being considered is Baranów, 40km west of Warsaw. Built on around 3000 ha of land, the airport will have an initial capacity of 45 million passengers a year, which will later increase to 100 million. Air and railway traffic will be integrated into a single hub. Passengers will be able to reach the airport via new, high-speed train connections to Warsaw and other major cities. Road infrastructure around the airport will be developed, too, linking to the nearby motorway. The government envisages the creation of a “new town” by the airport, featuring a business park and congress centre with a regional significance.

The government does not rule out involvement by companies from abroad.

In neighbouring Belarus the Government is talking a very different approach and finalising its strategy for the development of regional airports, with different ones designated for different traffic types.

The New Central Polish Airport project is undeniably an idea that other countries would do well to study, especially those that consistently bicker about whether airport infrastructure investment should go into the capital city’s airport(s) or to the regions.

Source:The First News, Warsaw

Vietnam: three major airports need over 5 billion USD for upgrading

More than 5.11 billion USD is needed to build Long Thanh airport and upgrade Noi Bai and Tan Son Nhat airports for the 2018-2021 period, with a vision to 2025, according to the State-owned Airports Corporation of Vietnam (ACV) investment plan.

The number of passengers coming through 22 airports nationwide managed and operated by ACV is expected to grow 10 percent each year between 2018 and 2021 and is estimated to reach about 137 million by 2021.

Annual passenger growth rate between 2022 and 2025 is estimated to average 7 percent, hitting 185 million by 2025. Based on these numbers, ACV estimated investment on the three key airports.

During 2018-2021, Noi Bai International Airport in Hanoi will expand international terminal T2 to reach capacity of 15 million passengers per year and terminal T3 with capacity of 10 million passengers per year, while upgrading parking areas and supporting facilities. The upgrade looks to enable the airport to serve 30 million passengers across all terminals by 2020 and 60 million by 2030.

The total estimated investment for the upgrade is nearly 11.2 trillion VND (493.3 million USD).

Tan Son Nhat International Airport in HCM City needs over 12.6 trillion VND (555 million USD) to improve its capacity. Terminal T3 is planned to be constructed to serve 10 million passengers per year, along with an expansion of parking areas, runways and assisting equipment. The airport expects to welcome 45 million passengers per year by 2020.

Long Thanh Airport in the southern province of Dong Nai is in need of over 92.1 trillion (4 billion USD) for the first phase of its construction by 2025.

Source: Vietnam News Agency (VNA)