Mexican defense ministry to remain owner of Santa Lucía airport site – AMLO

Mexico’s defense ministry (Sedena) will remain the owner of the site of the Santa Lucía military air base, which is set to be turned into an international airport under a plan to develop a larger airport system for Mexico City.

At his daily press conference on Friday, AMLO (pictured) noted that the fact that Sedena engineers will be tasked with building the infrastructure for the international airport because it is the owner.

The president also said that the transport and communications ministry (SCT) will reach an agreement with Sedena regarding the future collection of airport charges (TUA) at Santa Lucía.

AMLO was directly responding to a report by local daily Reforma, which states that federal auditor ASF has repeatedly questioned the participation of Sedena in non-military public works.

According to the paper, some ASF reports have noted that Sedena lacks the powers to sign agreements for the construction, maintenance and demolition of works carried out in non-military locations.

Based on article 29 of the law of the federal public administration, which provides the basis for the administration of Mexico’s federal government, Sedena is allowed to «build and prepare fortifications, fortresses and all kind of military facilities for the use of the army and the air force, as well as the administration and conservation of military bases, hospitals and relevant facilities.»

The defense ministry is also allowed to «provide military advice for the construction of all kinds of road and air transport infrastructure.»

SANTA LUCIA

Last week, AMLO confirmed that the Mexican army will be responsible for the construction of all the infrastructure needed to turn the Santa Lucía air base into an international airport, including two additional runways and the terminal building.

Authorities are reportedly only awaiting the completion of a report commissioned from foreign firms, which will serve to define the exact locations of the runways.

The architectural model that was used in the construction of a second terminal at AICM, which was opened in 2007, will also be used at Santa Lucía in order to reduce construction costs, according to AMLO.

The spending budget proposal for 2019 that the finance ministry (SHCP) submitted to congress, and which was approved earlier this week, earmarked 15bn pesos (US$764mn) to Sedena for the modernization and rehabilitation of airport infrastructure. These funds will be used for the works at Santa Lucía, authorities have confirmed.

Source: BNAmericas

Punjab cabinet approves setting up of international airport at Halwara

Punjab cabinet on Monday gave a formal approval to the state and central government’s proposal to set up an international civil terminal at Air Force Station Halwara. It also pledged to give away 135.54 acres land free of cost for the project.
The Cabinet, at a meeting chaired by chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh, also gave go-ahead for signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Airports Authority of India (AAI) for the same.

A spokesperson of the chief minister’s office said that the civil terminal would be developed jointly by the AAI and the Government of Punjab through a Joint Venture Company (JVC) to be constituted for the purpose. While AAI would have majority stake of 51 percent, the Punjab government, through the Greater Ludhiana Development Authority (GLADA), will have 49 percent stake in the project.

The state Government would provide 135.54 acres of land free of cost to the JVC by the way of its equity in the project. The capital expenditure on development of the new airport would be borne by AAI, whereas the expenditure on the operation, maintenance and repairs would be taken care of by the JVC.

According to the spokesperson, the first phase of the project, which will include development of a new international civil enclave over an area of 135.54 acres for full-fledged operations up to Code-4C type aircraft, is likely to be completed within three years.

The project, aimed at giving a fillip to the economic development of Punjab’s business and industrial hub of Ludhiana, also fulfills a long-pending demand of the Ludhiana-based industry, which the chief minister has now acceded.

Notably, Ludhiana is Punjab’s largest industrial and business city with a population of nearly two million, which is presently serviced by a small airport at Sahnewal under the operational control of AAI, which runs RCS-UDAN flights to Delhi. Ludhiana also has the advantage of being at the geographical centre of Punjab.

With the length of the runway at the present airport being limited, it only allows for operation of small aircrafts which severely limits air connectivity.

Moreover, as the city has grown significantly around the airport, acquisition of additional land and expansion of the existing airport at Sahnewal is not feasible.
Source: The Times of India

Lisbon Airport executive admits airport is “overcrowded” but not “collapsing,”

The perceived need to transform the Montijo military air base near Lisbon into a commercial facility for low cost carriers has occupied many column inches. But, a formal project for its conversion is yet to be made public and previous attempts to open a second Lisbon airport, such as one at Alcochete, which was first suggested four decades ago, have foundered.

Lisbon Airport executive admits airport is “overcrowded” but not “collapsing,” and claims no forecast could have foreseen its recent rapid growth;
Warning signs were there ahead of the explosion in LCC activity in Lisbon, but a number of factors perhaps influenced a more conservative growth;
This all raises a major question over should alternative methods of forecasting be given more prominence.
Now ANA Airports of Portugal’s CCO Francisco Pita has defended the city’s existing Humberto Delgado International Airport gateway, saying “We don’t have a collapsing airport, we have a crowded airport”. He insisted that the airport is not operating beyond its capacity and even argued that it is “missing out” on 1.8 million passengers per annum, implying that there is still spare capacity.

Crucially, Mr Pita rejected any “negligence” in planning for the future, stating that no study predicted the current growth rate the airport is experiencing. Two sets of questions arise out of this. Firstly, how has Lisbon’s only airport grown so quickly and could it have been foreseen? Secondly, how is passenger traffic forecasting undertaken and should the methodology change?

Historically, Lisbon Airport was an underachiever. It only broke through the 10 million ppa barrier in 2004, the same as the country’s population, which has varied up and down (currently down) between nine million and 10.5 million in the period 1960-2018. In the same year Madrid Airport handled almost four times as many, nearly 39 million. Both countries are the facing link between Europe and Latin America.

Serious growth was never going to come from a colonially focused and risk-averse TAP Air Portugal and its wholly owned subsidiary Portugalia and it was only in 2014 that it took off, despite the physical limitations of being hemmed in by urban developments on all sides.

Since then (2014-2017), the average annual growth rate has been +13.6%, adding over two million passengers each year. The new owner, Vinci Airports, which took over ANA, has been adding infrastructure but arguably not quickly enough and a master plan developed in 2017 is concerned as much with Montijo as the existing airport.

The catalyst for growth was partially easyJet’s opening of a Lisbon base in 2011 but mainly that of Ryanair’s base project in 2014. Since then those two airlines have moved to a position where they have a little less than 20% of the seat capacity, roughly the rate of passenger growth in international passengers in 2017-18.

TAP remains the dominant carrier in Lisbon, but LCCs are growing their presence and hold the second, third and fourth positions based on weekly seat capacity.

In order to deal with the threat TAP fought back, rebranding the ageing Portugalia as TAP Express and dumping its Fokker 100 and ERJ-145 fleet, replacing them with new E190 and ATR 72 equipment, thus enhancing its own prospects.

Could this rapid growth that ensued have been forecast? One must bear in mind that the (95%) takeover of ANA by Vinci was approved in Jun-2013, a little before Ryanair established its base there. Such transactions always create a planning hiatus of a couple of years or so while management functions are fashioned, removed or revised.

It is not the best time to be undertaking any sort of master planning and any forecasts commissioned and generated would have cautiously taken into account the declining growth levels of the previous years as the base point.

The warning signs were there though. From 2011 to 2014 Western Europe’s LCC seat ratio grew by 1.1 percentage points more than did Portugal’s and in neighbouring Spain where they were more established 56.3% of seats were on those LCCs compared to 43% in Portugal in 2014.

One must also consider the very nature of traffic forecasting itself, one that has been under review by organisations such as ICAO in recent years. Most airports and third-party forecasters still use the favoured quantitative methods of econometric forecasting using regression models which permit the relationship between two or more variables to be examined. Such models are particularly suited to long-term forecasting but “long-term” in the air transport business is shrinking.

Moreover, qualitative (judgemental and intuitive) methodology, having been sidelined, is making a comeback as a result of that shrinkage because it is better able to take into account the political and economic trends that influence everything. Would a regression model have been able to forecast the election of President Trump? Probably not, but qualitative forecasting did.

Some forecasters now use essentially GDP (macro and micro-economic) data, qualified by economic and business forecasts and trends that no machine could ever discern such as the sudden surge in popularity of Lisbon as a short break destination. Much the same could be said of Iceland, which defied all econometric forecasts by having a volcanic eruption (which grounded half of Europe’s air fleet!), which gained global notoriety, at the same time as the value of its currency halved during a financial crisis, making the place actually affordable to visit.

In the circumstances perhaps another forecast is called for before the Montijo conversion project is finalised.

Incheon Int’l Airport to join San Miguel on developing new Manila airport

The Incheon International Airport Corp. (IIAC) will work together with Filipino multinational company San Miguel Corp. on developing the Philippines’ new airport near Manila.

IIAC said Sunday that it has entered into the memorandum of understanding with San Miguel Corp, the Philippines’ largest company to cooperate on developing a new international airport in Bulacan province, about 40 kilometers northwest from Manila.

San Miguel currently is waiting for the Filipino government’s final awarding of the new airport project worth about 17.5 trillion won ($15.5 billion). In April, it gained an approval on its unsolicited proposal of opening a new airport, dubbed New Manila International Airport that it submitted in 2016. Once awarded, San Miguel will be given the rights to build and operate the new Manila airport for 50 years. The company plans to set up the new airport with as many as four parallel runways to serve over 100 million passengers yearly.

The Philippines’ capital Manila already has a main air gateway Manila Ninoy Aquino International Airport but it already has reached its saturation point. Last year, a total of 42 million people traveled through the airport, exceeding its annual service capacity of 31 million.

IIAC said the New Manila International Airport will be constructed on reclaimed land just like the Incheon International Airport itself, allowing it to share its experience on constructing and operating the airport with San Miguel. It plans to work with the Filipino primarily on operating the new airport.

Source: Pulse