TFS bags contract to operate,manage F&B outlets at Goa airport

Travel Food Services (TFS), which is into travel-focused food and beverages (F&B) and retail business, has bagged master concessionaire contract for operating and managing F&B outlets at the Goa airport, a senior airport official said Tuesday. The company, which currently operates more than 280 outlets across airports, railway stations and highways, spread across 19 cities, won the mandate after competitive bidding.

«TFS has won the contract as a master concessionaire for retail and food and beverages for Goa airport at a cost of Rs 3.98 crore per month,» Goa airport director CH Negi told reporters in Vasco. As part of the contract, the company will revamp the existing F&B facility, he said.
It will also invite reputed food and beverages brands, both domestic and international, to set up their outlets at the airport.

Negi said that the company has already opened 13 outlets, adding that all the outlets, including food courts, will be operational by the year-end. «Revamping the food and beverages facility at the Goa airport would be an exciting opportunity for the company,» said Sunil Kapur, chairman, TFS.

The company has major concessions across key airports including Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata and Bengaluru, he added.
Source: Zee Business

ACV to pour VNĐ4 trillion into upgrading Cát Bi International Airport

The Airports Corporation of Việt Nam (ACV) is focusing on accelerating investment in key projects at Cát Bi International Airport (Hải Phòng) with a total investment capital of about VNĐ4 trillion (US$170.1 million).

These projects include passenger terminal T2, a parking lot in front of the new terminal and a cargo terminal, as well as a number of projects to renovate and expand existing aircraft parking areas.

For the T2 construction project, ACV has completed the selection of consultancy contractors for the feasibility study (FS). The winning contractors are preparing architectural plans for the passenger terminal, the FS and basic designs.

The terminal will have a capacity of five million passengers per year and be able to expand to 10 million passengers per year. The auxiliary works for the terminal include the synchronous infrastructure system and traffic system to connect with terminal T1. Total investment is around VNĐ1.6 trillion (excluding land clearance costs) and construction is scheduled to complete by the fourth quarter of 2020.

ACV is completing the procedures for the approval of expansion projects as regulated. The project of building a cargo terminal and parking lot in front of T2 is in the process of selecting consultant contractors to carry out a feasibility study.

According to a representative of ACV, the number of passengers, journeys and cargo through Cát Bi International Airport has exceeded the capacity of its design. Besides, traffic connections between Hải Phòng and neighbouring localities will increase demands in travelling by air in the coming time. Therefore, upgrades and expansions of the airport’s infrastructure are urgently needed.

The project to build a parking area in front of the cargo terminal has a total investment of about VNĐ850 billion. The commodity station has a capacity of 100,000 tonnes of cargo per year and it is planned to expand to 250,000 tonnes of cargo per year. The auxiliary works for the terminal and the infrastructure system have a total investment of about VNĐ390 billion.

Hải Phòng confirmed the city will focus on leadership, direction and co-ordinating with ACV to ensure progress.

At the same time, the port city asked ACV to propose more areas that can be cleared to meet the development needs of Cát Bi International Airport in the future. The city also requested ACV focus resources, select good investors and strive to complete the project in 2020

Source: Vietnam News

AAI to pick 51% stake in Dholera International Airport

Construction of the much-awaited Dholera International Airport (DIAC) is likely to begin early next year with the Airports Authority of India (AAI) approving a decision earlier this month to take a 51% stake in the project. AAI will be inducted on the board of DIAC at the latter’s upcoming board meeting in December, Jai Prakash Shivahare, MD, Dholera Industrial City Development, told FE. While AAI will hold 51%, the Gujarat government will hold 33% and the central government, through the Delhi Mumbai Industrial Corridor Development Corporation (DMICDC), will hold a 16% stake in DIAC.
Construction of the first phase of the airport is expected to cost roughly Rs 2,000 crore.

The airport will have a runway of 3,000 metres, a terminal building and other peripheral facilities, Shivahare said, adding that the construction is expected to begin sometime in Q1FY20. The first phase will be built to cater to a capacity of 1.1-5.5 million passengers annually which DIAC expects to reach in 2029. Shivahare said depending on the growth in passenger traffic, DIAC will build a second runway of 4,000 metres in the second phase, designed to cater to 6.5-12.5 million passengers annually, till 2035. The third phase of expansion will accommodate 13.8-25.8 million passengers annually, designed to last till 2044.
AAI is yet to decide on whether construction of the airport will be bid out via a PPP model or for a cash contract.
Shivahare added there is also a plan to build an aircraft maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) facility, given the lack of such facilities in the country. “Obviously, the first requirement is to have a functional airport for passenger movement. We will look at the setting up the MRO shortly thereafter,” Shivahare said.

Source: Financial Express

Regulations are eased opening expanded US Airport Privatisation programme to any airport

The Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) reauthorisation bill which was passed by Congress this autumn contained a provision which passed under the radar outside the United States of America (USA). It considerably expanded what was known as the Airport Privatisation Pilot Programme, enacted by Congress in 1996 and then slightly expanded from five to 10 airports in 2012.

Summary:

The US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has expanded the country’s airport privatisation programme;
Any airport can now be leased without limit and FAA grants available to analyse any potential leases;
But there has been no change yet on airline double super-majority authorisation rule.
Airport privatisation was a new and untried idea in the US in 1996, and the regulations framing the original pilot programme reflected that. It permitted only five airports to be leased in the long-term. Only one of those could be a ‘large hub’ according to the FAA’s interpretation and at least one must be a general aviation (GA) airport. It also imposed a lengthy and convoluted approval process, by airlines serving the airport in question and by the FAA.

The first change made by Section 160 of the FAA reauthorisation act removes the numerical and categorical limitations. Henceforth, any US airport may be long-term leased, and without limit. That means the situation that prevailed for six years, when the City of Chicago held the only “slot” in the programme reserved for a large hub airport (Midway), cannot re-occur. The proposed lease of one large hub cannot hold up or preclude other large hubs from seeking to do likewise.

Accordingly, the programme has been renamed the Airport Investment Partnership Programme and that ‘partnership’ insertion suggests the future importance of public-private partnerships (P3s). Moreover, the term ‘privatisation’ as used in the UK and some other European countries generally means the sale of all or part of the ownership of the airport in question although it can also refer to any financial involvement by a private company.

Since both the 1996 US pilot programme law and the 2018 revised version permit only long-term leases, these deals are inherently long-term P3s between the airport owner (city, county, state, etc.) and the private consortium that wins a competitive process to lease, improve, operate, and manage the airport.

Another important change is that henceforth long-term P3 leases can be structured in a way in which the public-sector partner has a part-interest in the special-purpose entity created to manage and operate the airport for the term of the lease. Such shared-control agreements are increasingly common in Europe, notably France and Germany.

Politically, that may reduce opposition to US airport P3 leases created by fear that the public entity will “lose control” of the airport (although that can be addressed in the long-term lease agreement by a range of negotiated performance measures, etc.).

Another highly significant change is that while the previous law permitted the FAA to exempt the airport owner from having to repay previous federal airport grants if it leased the airport, the new law automatically exempts the airport owner from having to do this. This removes an obstacle that increased the risk of potential US airport P3 deals compared to foreign ones.

In another small but important change, the new law will make it easier for airport owners to make serious assessments of whether to make use of long-term P3 leases. Doing this responsibly requires detailed legal and financial analysis, which is generally beyond the experience of city or state legal and financial staff. The new law allows the FAA to make grants of up to USD750,000 to any US airport that wishes to analyse whether, and how to go about, engaging in P3 leases under the Airport Investment Partnership Programme.

There is some disappointment that the new law did not change one provision of the original pilot programme that is considered a uniquely US obstacle to getting privatisation approval, namely the requirement for airline approval of the deal via a double super-majority. Specifically, 65% of all the airlines serving the airport must approve the deal terms and also airlines representing at least 65% of the annual landed weight at the airport. In other words a majority of airlines could approve a lease but it might be blocked by the largest of them in terms of movements.

The good news on this issue is that airlines involved with three such long-term P3 lease deals have accepted the negotiated deal terms that were acceptable to private-sector bidders. Those were Southwest Airlines at Midway Airport before the procedure was withdrawn, American Airlines and JetBlue Airways at San Juan International in Puerto Rico and American, JetBlue and United Airlines at Westchester County, NY, a procedure still in limbo. So there is at least historical precept in such cases.

The airports currently in the privatisation programme that are outstanding appear in the table below. in the case the definition ‘Outstanding’ can mean a long time:

Source: The Blue Swan Daily