The Scotsman

Multiple offers lodged for Prestwick Airport

● Submission­s to be evaluated for site saved from closure in 2013

- By ALASTAIR DALTON Transport Correspond­ent

S e v e r a l b i d s t o b u y a i l i n g Prestwick Airport have been submitted, the Scottish Government has revealed.

A n u n d i s c l o s e d n u m b e r of expression­s of interest to acquire the S outh Ayrshire complex were received by the deadline on Monday.

Officials said these would be evaluated. Up to three of the bidders are due to be asked at the end of next week to lodge full offers.

The preferred bidder is due to be selected around 6 S ep - tember and the sale completed around 4 October, according to the sale documents.

Ministers have always said the debt-ridden airport would be returned to the private sector after they bought it for £1 in 2013 to avert closure and save hundreds of jobs.

However, the sale announceme­nt last month came as a surprise since several businesses have expressed interest in buying it over the past few years.

The S cottish Government has insisted it has not already lined up a buyer and i s n o t going through the formal sale process just to follow official procedures.

But its spokesman would say only: “The deadline for sub - mitting expression­s of interest has now passed and sub - missions received will now be evaluated. To protect the integrity of the process, we will not be making any further comment and will update parliament at the appropriat­e time.”

The spokesman refused to clarify whether a buyer would have to repay the £39.9 million of Scottish Government loans pumped in so far to keep the airport going.

T h e s a l e d o c u ment s s t a te that evaluation of offers would include ”the price offered for t h e s h a r e h o l d i n g i n PA H L [airport owner Prestwick Aviation Holdings Limited] on a debt free cash free basis (to be applied in repayment of the S c o t t i s h G o ve r n me n t l o a n first)”.

O n e r e s p e c t e d a v i a t i o n analyst was sceptical ab out whether a sale of the 880-acre site could be secured.

John Strickland, of JLS Consulting, said: “In my view, it is likely to prove challengin­g to find a buyer for Prestwick given intense competitio­n from Glasgow and Edinburgh and a slowing economic outlook.”

Ryanair is the airport’s sole remaining airline, flying some 670,000 passengers in the year to March, the airport’s lowest for 20 years. It compares to Glasgow’s total of nearly ten million and Edinburgh’s 14.3 million in 2018.

H o w e v e r, P r e s t w i c k i s ex p a n d i n g c a rg o a n d mi l i - tar y flights, and hopes to be l i c e n s e d a s a s p a c e p o r t f o r h o r i z o n t a l l a u n c h e s , a n d become a logistics hub for the expansion of Heathrow.

adalton@scotsman.com

 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ?? 0 Prestwick’s terminal was built for 4 million passengers but handled just 670,000 in the year to March
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN 0 Prestwick’s terminal was built for 4 million passengers but handled just 670,000 in the year to March

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