Shamefully late': Mumbai begins work on new airport after 20-year wait
Mumbai finally
started work on a new airport more than two decades after first
proposing it, as jets ran out of space to operate in one of the
busiest aerodromes using a single runway.On Sunday, Prime
Minister Narendra
Modi laid
the foundation stone of Navi Mumbai International
Airport, to be built on about 1,160 hectares (2,866 acres) of land
about 35 kilometers (22 miles) southeast of the existing facility.
The
new airport, expected to handle 60 million passengers annually when
fully complete, is running behind schedule with problems ranging from
approvals to delays in the bidding process.“We are trailing behind
in infrastructure given the pace at which the aviation sector is
growing,” Modi said at the event.
“We
are trying to press ahead with the speed of execution.”India has
been lagging behind China, Singapore and
Dubai among regional hubs in upgrading airports. In 2019, Beijing is
due to open a $12.9 billion facility that will become the city’s
second mega airport and capable of accommodating more than 75 million
passengers with as many as seven runways.
In
the past two decades, Singapore and
Dubai have boosted their capacity, building new terminals and
becoming the eastern and western hubs for Indian air travelers.“There
are no more slots in Mumbai,” said Sanjiv Kapoor, chief operating
officer at Vistara, the Indian affiliate of Singapore Airlines
Ltd.
“All
the airlines have a hit a wall. It is not good when the commercial
capital is not able to add flights. We certainly want to fly more to
Mumbai”The first phase with one runway will be operational by
December 2019, handling 10 million passengers a year, according to
local officials.
India
needs to spend as much as 4 trillion rupees ($62 billion) to expand
and build new airports over the next decade-and-a-half, but progress
has been far slower than what’s needed to manage one of the
fastest-growing air travel markets in the world.
The
airport, first proposed in 1997 and approved a decade later by
India’s cabinet, will be built by a joint venture between a GVK
Power & Infrastructure Ltd.-led consortium and state-run former
monopoly Airports
Authority of India. GVK
also operates the current Mumbai airport,
which has the capacity to handle 40 million passengers annually.Last
year, the Mumbai airport
set a world record handling 969 flights in a 24-hour period, the
Times of India reported. That’s the highest for an airport which
operates only one runway at any given point in time, it said.
The
aerodrome is now aiming to reach 1,000 aircraft movements.

Comments
Post a Comment