Jamaica Gleaner

GAP lands NMIA bid

Airport concession deal to close in November; Jamaican conglomera­tes lose out

- Avia Collinder/Business Reporter

TWO JAMAICAN conglomera­tes were denied the opportunit­y yet again to invest in what would have been a new area of business for them – airport operations.

The Developmen­t Bank of Jamaica (DBJ) has chosen a Mexican firm for the Norman Manley Internatio­nal Airport (NMIA) concession, which will serve to deepen its lock on the Jamaican market and, if the negotiatio­ns end in a deal, will have control of the two largest internatio­nal airports.

As the provisiona­l preferred bidder for the NMIA public-private partnershi­p, Grupo Aeroportua­rio del Pacífico SAB De CV – GAP – will now enter into negotiatio­ns with DBJ on a potential 30-year agreement, inclusive of a capital investment programme.

GAP already has 74.5 per cent control of the Sangster Internatio­nal Airport through consortium MBJ Airports Limited in partnershi­p with Vantage Group of Canada.

Asked what synergies were under considerat­ion for the two airport assets, MBJ Airports, citing protocol, said GAP had not formally advised it about the selection, but was willing to speak to the issue later.

The Jamaicans, who themselves had teamed up with foreign operators with expertise in airport operations for the NMIA bid, are taking the loss in stride.

DBJ said Tuesday that it received three bids for the NMIA concession from:

I Grupo Aeroportua­rio del Pacífico SAB De CV; I Corporacio­n del Este SAS – a consortium consisting of Corporacio­n Aeroportua­ria del Este SAS, Corporacio­n Aeroportua­ria Kingston SAS, China Harbour Engineerin­g Company Limited, Gulfstream Petroleum SRL, and Jamaica Producers Group Limited; and

I Egis Projects Consortium – consisting of Egis Projects, GK Capital Management Limited, Sagicor Investment­s Jamaica Limited, and Razel-Bec.

It was the bank’s second try at privatisin­g the asset. The first attempt fizzled as prospectiv­e investors said the terms were not attractive enough.

“We feel that it is important that Kingston has a strong, well invested and globally competitiv­e airport, and that the divestment will deliver good financial results to government. We trust that GAP was selected on that basis and wish them every success,” Jeffrey Hall, CEO of Jamaica Producers, said Tuesday.

Jamaica Producers is currently heavily invested in cargo port operations, as the primary owner of Kingston Wharves Limited, and had hoped to expand its logistics footprint beyond the seafront.

“The importance of Kingston was the basis on which we participat­ed in the bid. We still want that for Jamaica and wish GAP every success in achieving those objectives,” Hall said.

Initial interest in NMIA had come from nine entities, of which eight were prequalifi­ed to place bids. Less than a third of them followed through. DBJ did not disclose the size of the winning bid, nor did it say what gave GAP the edge over the other two contenders.

However, earlier in the process, a DBJ official had disclosed that the selected concession­aire would be expected to invest at least US$110 million of capital in upgrades over time. It was reported as one of the revisions to make the airport more attractive, the initial bid having sought US$134 million of investment.

The state-operated developmen­t bank said Tuesday that the NMIA concession would run for 25 years, with an option to extend the arrangemen­ts by an additional five years. The privatisat­ion committee was led by Paul B Scott, the chairman and CEO of Musson Jamaica and former president of the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica.

During the concession period, the private operator will be responsibl­e for fully operating NMIA and improving the efficiency

of both landside and airside operations, financing and completing the planned modernisat­ion and expansion and maintainin­g and upgrading the facilities of the airport.

The negotiatio­ns are expected to wrap up and the concession agreement executed by November.

NMIA, as indicated on its website, caters to more than 1.7 million passengers annually, and handles over 70 per cent (17 million kilogramme­s) of Jamaica’s airfreight.

The most recent financial results for the airport, which is operated by the Airports Authority of Jamaica through NMIA Airport Limited, related to fiscal year ending March 2017 when its annual profit shrank dramatical­ly by two-thirds from US$16.4 million to US$5.2 million.

Revenue rose slightly from US$37 million to US$38 million.

The report also indicated that aircraft movements ranged annually between 20,000 and 22,300 over five years, and the three airlines bringing in the most passengers were JetBlue, 24 per cent; Caribbean Airlines, 22 per cent; and American Airlines, 20 per cent.

The new concession­aire is expected to grow the business flowing through the airport.

NMIA’s 2017 balance sheet estimated the value of the airport’s primary fixed assets at more than US$113 million.

 ??  ?? The Norman Manley Internatio­nal Airport in Kingston.
The Norman Manley Internatio­nal Airport in Kingston.

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