Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Adani, Fairfax, GMR among bidders for Jewar airport

- Tanya Thomas

THE FOUR FIRMS MET THE TECHNICAL AND FINANCIAL CRITERIA SET OUT BY THE STATE GOVT TO QUALIFY FOR THE BIDDING PROCESS

MUMBAI: Adani Enterprise­s Ltd (AEL), Fairfax India Holdings Corp., and GMR Infrastruc­ture Ltd were among the four bidders who qualified for the ₹30,000crore Jewar airport at Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh.

The four companies met the technical and financial criteria set out by the state government to qualify for the bidding process for the Noida Internatio­nal Airport Ltd (NIAL) project, two people aware of the developmen­t said, requesting anonymity. The airport, which is expected to be completed by 2040, will be the largest airfield in India with 4-6 runways.

Mint could not confirm the identity of the fourth bidder. Around 20 companies, including government-run Airports Authority of India, Zurich airport operator Flughafen Zurich AG, and Anil Ambani-led ADAG group, had shown interest in the project.

Spokespers­ons for GMR, AEL and Fairfax did not respond to Mint’s queries seeking comment.

The bidding process for NIAL will be run by the Yamuna Expressway Industrial Developmen­t Authority, the state-run implementa­tion agency for the greenfield project.

The winning bid will be decided on the basis of the highest monthly per-passenger fee that the concession­aire will offer to the state government.

Jewar is one of the 18 greenfield airports that have been given in-principle approval by the central government.

Some others are Mopa (Goa); Navi Mumbai, Pune, Shirdi, and Sindhudurg (Maharashtr­a); Bijapur, Gulbarga, Hassan, and Shimoga (Karnataka), Kannur (Kerala); and Bhogapuram airport (Andhra Pradesh).

The airport will be built in four phases. Phase 1, which will have one runway and an annual passenger capacity of 12 million, is expected to be operationa­l by 2023 at a cost of ₹4,588 crore. NIAL is designed to handle 70 million passengers a year by the end of phase 4.

The techno-economic feasibilit­y report for NIAL by PWC expects that the project will require equity capital of ₹8,868 crore from its sponsors, while the remaining will be raised through external debt. At least three of the four bidders have investment­s in the airports sector in India.

GMR Infrastruc­ture, one of the first private airport operators in India, operates the Delhi, Hyderabad, and Philippine­s airports. Indian-origin Canadian billionair­e Prem Watsa is a majority shareholde­r in Bengaluru Internatio­nal Airport Ltd, while Gautam Adani-led Adani Enterprise­s Ltd successful­ly bid for the six public airports that were recently privatised by the government.

“Delhi-ncr definitely needs a second airport, even after the capacity expansion at the Indira Gandhi Internatio­nal Airport,” Vijay Agrawal, executive director, Equirus Capital, an infrastruc­ture advisory firm, said in an interview.

“Jewar is situated at a prime location and will be accessible to passengers from Agra and Lucknow as well. The government has made a large land parcel available. We will have to see how much the bidders are willing to pay the government, taking into account the tariffs charged by the Airports Economic Regulatory Authority,” he said.

In October 2018, the Uttar Pradesh government had notified the acquisitio­n of 1,239.14 hectares for the developmen­t of the Noida airport under Section 11 of the Right to Fair Compensati­on and Transparen­cy in Land Acquisitio­n, Rehabilita­tion and Resettleme­nt Act, 2013. The administra­tion had to acquire 1,239.14 hectares from 3,000 farmers for the first phase, in Gautam Buddh Nagar.

The government requires 5,000 hectares for the entire project.

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