Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Delhi, Mumbai to have 3 airports each by ’40

REPORT 31 cities to have 2 each; 190 operationa­l airports expected

- Faizan Haidar

NEWDELHI:AT least 31 cities in India will have two airports by 2040 while Delhi and Mumbai will have a third airport by then, according to a vision document released by the ministry of civil aviation on Tuesday.

The report released at Global Aviation Summit in Mumbai says most of the large Indian airports are expected to be saturated over the next 10-15 years.

Hindustan Times had on November 1 reported that at least 20 cities in India would require a second airport by 2030, quoting the initial findings of a study by the civil aviation ministry.

“In leading regions like Delhi and Mumbai even the second airports are likely to be saturated by 2040 and will require a third airport. India’s commercial airline fleet is likely to grow from 622 in March 2018 to around 2,359 in March 2040 ,” said a civil aviation ministry official, quoting the “Vision 2040” document released by the ministry.

“India may have around 190200 operationa­l airports in 2040. The incrementa­l land requiremen­t is expected to be around 150,000 acres and the capital investment (not including cost of acquiring land) is expected to be $40-50 billion,” the official added.

The report says that the total capital expenditur­e for brownfield [upgrading existing proat jects] and greenfield [new projects] capacity expansion in India until 2040 is conservati­vely expected to be in the range of $40-50 billion.

Another civil aviation ministry official said that the government may consider establishi­ng a NABH Nirman Fund (NNF) with a starting corpus of around $2 billion to support low traffic airports in their initial phases. NABH stands for Next Generation Airports for Bharat. The concept of land pooling may be used to keep land acquisitio­n costs low and to provide landowners with high value developed plots in the vicinity of the airports.

HT had reported that Mumbai, Delhi, Goa, Visakhapat­nam, Jaipur, Pune, Ahmedabad, Rajkot, Patna, Kolkata and Bengaluru are among cities that will need a second airport by 2030. By 2035, more cities will join this list. The ministry will now write to respective state government­s, sharing the informatio­n and asking them to identify land for a new airport least five years before the airport reaches its capacity.

India’s airports currently handle 183.90 million passengers a year, according to the 2017-18 data released by the aviation regulator Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation. The number has grown in recent years — from 134.98 million in 2015-16 to 158.43 million in 2016-17.

This year, it is expected to cross 200 million. Some of the bigger airports are already operating in excess of their capacity. For instance, the Delhi airport handled 63.5 million passengers in 2017, and is expected to reach 70 million this year and will start operating beyond its capacity. It is also among the busiest airports worldwide, according to Airports Council Internatio­nal (ACI), the global trade representa­tive of the airport authoritie­s.

“It is good that ministry has kept 2040 in mind as aviation infrastruc­ture should last generation­s. The way growth is going, Mumbai will need third airport and they should start thinking about it now,” said Kapil Kaul, CEO & director of CAPA South Asia, which provides market intelligen­ce for the aviation and travel industry.

India will also have a robust commercial aircraft manufactur­ing ecosystem with global collaborat­ion. It will meet at least 70% of the country’s commercial aircraft demand and also export to other countries.

AIRPORTS IN INDIA CURRENTLY HANDLE 183.9 MN PASSENGERS A YEAR, ACCORDING TO 2017-18 DATA RELEASED BY AVIATION REGULATOR DIRECTORAT­E GENERAL OF CIVIL AVIATION

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India