Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Delayed yet again, Berlin’s new airport confounds officials

- JUERGEN BAETZ

BERLIN — For a country that prides itself on efficiency and punctualit­y, the saga of Berlin’s new airport, whose opening was delayed for a fourth time on Monday, has become something of a national joke and source of embarrassm­ent for Germany.

The mayor of the capital city, Klaus Wowereit, said managers for the new Willy Brandt Internatio­nal Airport have determined that it’s no longer possible to open on Oct. 27. He insisted it wasn’t yet possible to give a new date, but the delay means the capital’s airport won’t be opened until 2014 at the earliest — about three years later than originally planned.

The state and national government­s that hold stakes in the airport were informed last week of “major problems” with the project’s fire-safety system and other technical features, Transport Ministry spokesman Sebastian Rudolph said.

The airport, one of the country’s biggest infrastruc­ture projects, is supposed to replace the city’s two aging and increasing­ly cramped

airports, Tegel and Schoenefel­d, which served West and East Berlin respective­ly.

It was first scheduled to open in late 2011, then delayed to June 2012. That date was abandoned only a few weeks before the airport was set to open; the inaugurati­on was put back to March and then postponed again to October.

Costs have already more than doubled to $5.8 billion. Postponing the opening again will lead to additional costs, Rudolph acknowledg­ed.

The project has embarrasse­d local politician­s in Berlin and Brandenbur­g, the state that surrounds the capital and is the site for the new airport. The two states together own a majority in the airport’s management company.

In Germany, a nation with a reputation for planning, engineerin­g and financial discipline, the continuing delays to the airport’s opening have become the target of jokes. Wowereit — Berlin’s centerleft mayor and a deputy chairman of the country’s main opposition Social Democrats — has faced criticism for what opponents view as an overly relaxed attitude to the apparent management and planning failures.

Wowereit faced calls from opponents Monday to step down. He said he had no intention of resigning as mayor, but announced that he would hand over his job as chairman of the airport operator’s supervisor­y board to Matthias Platzeck, the governor of Brandenbur­g state.

The board will meet Jan. 16 to review the situation, and Wowereit said it is expected to hear calls for the removal of airport Chief Executive Officer Rainer Schwarz. The federal government said it no longer has confidence in Schwarz.

Platzeck’s office, meanwhile, announced late Monday that the governor will seek a vote of confidence in the Brandenbur­g state legislatur­e’s next session over the airport because “he wants to be absolutely certain of the full support” of the parties in his left-wing government.

In Berlin, local opposition lawmakers said they will organize a confidence vote this week to unseat Wowereit. The mayor’s centrist coalition, however, holds a comfortabl­e majority in the Berlin state legislatur­e.

Wowereit rejected calls for him to take personal responsibi­lity for the airport’s woes, saying that he hoped any further delays would be announced as soon as they are known.

“That’s better than trying to meet deadlines that can’t be met,” he said.

The airport, whose constructi­on was started in 2006, is designed to handle an annual 27 million passengers, but the existing two airports already handled 25 million passengers last year — raising fears that the airport may already be too small when it opens.

The German government moved from Bonn to Berlin in 1999, and the city has become an increasing­ly popular tourist destinatio­n.

Germany’s busiest airports, Frankfurt and Munich, handle 57 million and 38 million passengers a year, respective­ly.

A panel of inquiry in the Berlin state legislatur­e is already looking into the airport’s problems. Its chairman, Martin Delius of the opposition Pirate Party, had a sarcastic response to the latest delay.

“Let’s start on the next airport already,” he wrote on Twitter. “This one didn’t work out.” Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Geir Moulson and Frank Jordans of The Associated Press.

 ?? AP/MARKUS SCHREIBER ?? Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit talks to reporters Monday at a news conference in Berlin to announce another delay in the opening of the new Willy Brandt Internatio­nal Airport.
AP/MARKUS SCHREIBER Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit talks to reporters Monday at a news conference in Berlin to announce another delay in the opening of the new Willy Brandt Internatio­nal Airport.

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