Business Standard

Adani, GMR and Fairfax in race to build Jewar airport

GMR has right of first refusal if its bid is equal to or less than 10% of the highest

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

Top infrastruc­ture companies, including a foreign player, have bid to build and operate the second airport of Delhi in Jewar (Uttar Pradesh), around 40 km from Indira Gandhi Internatio­nal Airport. Sources aware of the developmen­t said Adani Group, Delhi Internatio­nal Airport (DIAL), Canadabase­d Fairfax Financial Holdings, and Zurich Airport had bid for the project, which when fully functional, would entail an investment of ~15,000 crore. DIAL is operated by GMR Infrastruc­ture.

The technical bids will be opened on November 6, followed by the opening of financial bids on November 29.

“We have seen a good response. Four firms have submitted bids, which is very encouragin­g since Jewar is a greenfield airport. The bidding will be made on per passenger basis, and will be completed in a single stage. The tender will be finalised on November 29,” said Shailendra Bhatia, officer on special duty, Yamuna Expressway Industrial Developmen­t Authority (YEIDA) — the implementi­ng agency of the airport. He refused to disclose the participat­ing entities. “Developmen­t work is likely to commence early in 2020 and the first phase is expected to be completed by 2023,” said Bhatia. The airport has been long pending. In 2001, Rajnath Singh, then UP chief minister (CM), first proposed an airport in Jewar. Mayawati, too, pursued the project after she became CM in 2007, but failed to make any headway.

The Jewar airport was necessitat­ed after a study by the Ministry of Civil Aviation (MCA) found that the existing airport in Delhi would get saturated in the next decade.

“The national Capital, with 66 million passengers in FY18-19, is now the seventh-largest airport in Asia. It will see significan­t growth when its fourth runway and fourth terminal are commission­ed in three to four years,” said a report prepared by the MCA.

DIAL, owned by GMR, by virtue of operating the Delhi airport has right of first refusal (ROFR) for the Jewar airport. According to the agreement signed between Airports Authority of India (AAI) and GMR Infra, while privatisin­g the Delhi airport in 2006, GMR Group has ROFR for any airport that is built within a 150-km radius of the existing airport in Delhi.

According to the norms, GMR will be asked to match the highest bid offered after the bidding process for the proposed Jewar airport. GMR’S bid will be accepted only if it is equal to or less than 10 per cent of the bid offered by the highest bidder.

It’s crucial for GMR to win the bid for Jewar airport as otherwise it will have a rival who would be competing to win airlines and passengers away from Delhi airport — the most valuable asset in the company’s portfolio.

Bu Adani Group has been very aggressive in its pursuit of airports. Earlier, the group bid twice to win half a dozen airports. “Adani was very aggressive last time. But it is expected that with such a high capital investment required in the six airports, the group may be conservati­ve in bidding for Jewar airport,” an industry source said.

Adani has also been aggressive to pick a stake in Mumbai airport but has been unable to after GVK Group — owner of the airport managed to raise ~7,614 crore by selling 79.1 per cent stake in its airport business to three investors to pare debt and stave off the Adani Group’s proposed acquisitio­n in Mumbai airport.

Prem Watsa’s Fairfax Group, which owns the Bangalore airport, has also been very bullish to invest in infrastruc­ture projects in India. “We are well-positioned to invest large sums of money in India,” Watsa recently wrote to investors.

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