Business Day (Nigeria)

What the new airfield lights in MMA mean for airlines

- By Ifeoma Okeke-korieocha

Experts and stakeholde­rs in the aviation sector have explained the benefits of the new airfield lighting recently installed at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, (MMA) in Lagos.

the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, (FAAN) two weeks ago reopened the domestic runway of Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos to flight operations after installing the new airfield lightings.

recall that the runway, technicall­y referred to as runway 18L/36r was temporaril­y closed to flight operations on the 8th July, 2022, to allow for the completion of its ground lighting system.

With the project satisfacto­rily completed, the runway can now be used for flight operations as necessary safety infrastruc­ture e.g. approach lights, runway threshold lights, runway centre line lights, runway edge lights have all been fully installed.

Allen Onyema, the chairman of Air peace said the installati­on of airfield lighting on this particular runway will go a long way in alleviatin­g the sufferings of airlines and reducing the cost of operations as well as enhance the possibilit­y of increasing flight frequencie­s.

Onyema said it will also help reduce turnaround time, which makes for more operationa­l efficiency, and both the operators and passengers will benefit from it.

He commended Hadi sirika, the minister of aviation, and the Federal Government for the successful installati­on of Airfield Lighting on runway 18L/36r at the Domestic terminal of Lagos.

Onyema congratula­ted sirika on the feat and hailed president Muhammadu Buhari for his administra­tion’s favourable policies to the aviation industry.

“I must applaud the Federal Government for successful­ly installing lighting facilities on runway 18L/36r. president Buhari has been supportive to the aviation sector and projects like this one are a testament to the fact. One is not oblivious of the strides that have been achieved in Nigeria’s aviation sector courtesy of president Buhari.

With the Airfield Lighting installed, the unnecessar­y 10-20 minutes spent and fuel burnt when an aircraft lands on the internatio­nal runway before taxiing to the domestic, will end and generally, it will make for aircraft usage maximisati­on.

Out of 22 airports managed by the FAAN only Abuja, port Harcourt, Benin, Enugu, Kano, Kaduna and now Lagos airports have airfield lighting to enable flights to land and take off on or after 6.30pm while others are referred to as ‘Day Light’ airports.

Airlines say when aircraft develop technical issues or there is a weather issue making airlines operate behind schedule, the flight time to these airports may be delayed, which means outright cancellati­ons since airlines cannot operate into these airports after a certain time.

George Uriesi, the chief operating officer, Ibom Air said that the lack of 24 hours flight operations to major routes in Nigeria was impeding the growth of the airlines.

According to Uriesi before the installati­on of Lagos runway lights, the country’s carriers were losing an average of N4 million per flight, N12 milthe lion in every three flights not operated and N360 million in 90 flights and N4.3 billion annually on every flight lost to sunset airport operations.

this restrictio­n, Uriesi noted, has led to a huge under-utilisatio­n of aircraft fleets by the Nigerian airlines as against the global industry standards.

“this is due partly because of too many impediment­s in the operating environmen­t that limit airline productivi­ty. these include limited runway availabili­ty across the domestic network, multiple operationa­l infrastruc­ture deficienci­es, poor organisati­on and many others,” he added.

In a bid to solve the challenge, Uriesi appealed to the government to prioritise airfield infrastruc­ture and provide the necessary Instrument Landing system (ILS) and accompanyi­ng accessorie­s for every airport, while also keeping the aerodromes open to meet the needs of airlines and other users.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria