Business Standard

Plan to integrate smaller airports with MIAL: Adani

Will also bid for upcoming second airports

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

The Adani group plans to adopt the hub-and-spoke model and integrate its portfolio of Mumbai and six other smaller airports — Ahmedabad, Lucknow, Mangalore, Jaipur, Trivandrum, and Guwahati — for which it has won developmen­t and operation rights over a 50-year lease.

“We see our airport portfolio as a critical lever to help converge tier-1 cities with tier-2 and -3 ones in a huband-spoke model,” Adani group Chairman and promoter Gautam Adani said. The firm signed a deal with the GVK group two days back to acquire 75 per cent stake in Mumbai Internatio­nal Airport (MIAL). With this, it now also owns the upcoming airport in Navi Mumbai.

The Ahmedabad-based conglomera­te — with investment­s in logistics, transporta­tion, utilities, and energy — surprised the industry with aggressive bids for the smaller airports.

At ~115 per passenger for Mangaluru and ~171 for Lucknow, the group’s bids were over 500 per cent more than the ones received from the GMR group and PNC Infratech, respective­ly. Similarly, the Adani group placed a bid of ~177 for Ahmedabad airport, nearly 200 per cent more than that of Autostrade Indian Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t.

“The addition of MIAL and Navi Mumbai to our existing portfolio of six airports provides us a transforma­tional platform that will help shape and create strategic adjacencie­s for our other B2B businesses,” Adani said. Adani said he expected the number of flyers in the country to grow five-fold, which means India would require 200 additional airports to handle over 1 billion domestic and internatio­nal passengers across the tier-1, -2 and -3 cities. “Majority of them will connect to Mumbai,” he said, adding that the company would also bid for the second airports that will be required in metro cities.

“Over this period, India’s top 30 cities are expected to each require two airports and Adani Airports sees itself well-positioned to help build the required infrastruc­ture platform. The economic value that the cities of the future create will be maximised around airports,” he said.

According to the plan in its annual report, the company plans to increase non-aero revenue developing "airport villages", and has assured its shareholde­rs that it was "well-positioned" to become the leading airport operator in India.

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