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IATA warns airlines heading for crisis on rising costs

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SINGAPORE: The growing cost of airport infrastruc­ture poses risks to the global airline industry’s profitabil­ity and growth, the head of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) said, adding a crisis due to inadequate infrastruc­ture was brewing almost everywhere in the world.

“We are headed for a crisis. Infrastruc­ture in general is not being built fast enough to meet growing demand,” Alexandre de Juniac, CEO General of IATA, an airline industry lobby group, told a conference yesterday ahead of the Singapore Airshow.

He said airport privatisat­ion is among major reasons driving cost rises when the industry needs affordable infrastruc­ture to accommodat­e capacity increases.

“Our members are very frustrated with the current state of privatised airports.

By all means invite private sector expertise to bring commercial discipline and a customer service focus to airport management. But our view is that the ownership is best left in public hands,” de Juniac said.

He cited the proposed £14bil (US$19.8bil) cost of a third runway at London’s Heathrow Airport and the developmen­t of a fifth terminal at Singapore’s Changi Airport as cases where it was crucial that costs were kept under control. “We must pay attention to these costs from the beginning,” de Juniac said.

“We would like to avoid big projects in which we see overruns because the infrastruc­ture is fantastic but it is very costly.”

He said Asia-Pacific needs to make much faster progress to address bottleneck­s, and that some big cities such as Jakarta, Bangkok and Manila are in desperate need of capacity improvemen­ts.

Global airline profits are expected to rise to a combined US$38.4bil this year, according to IATA forecasts, but net profit margins at 4.7% remain low by the standards of other industries. “Our exuberance is limited,” he said.

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