Saturday, May 22, 2010

East to attract more international traffic to Durban

Durban-Airports
Company South Africa (Acsa) and the government will focus on markets in
the East to attract more international traffic to Durban’s newly-opened
King Shaka International Airport.
Acsa managing director Monhla
Hlahla at the weekend said the company was prioritising the East as
studies showed that this was where future growth would come from.

“Even at the time when they were privatising Acsa, studies always
showed that future growth would come from Asia. This was before China
became big and it is beginning to show more now. Even if you talk to
the airlines, they tell you that Africa is number one and Asia is
number two,” Hlahla said.
Hlahla said Acsa would use the World Cup
as an opportunity to market the new airport to secure as many new
routes as possible. Last week, Acsa met the Beijing Airport Authority
and SAA about routes between South Africa and China.
The
KwaZulu-Natal government is negotiating with Jet Airways because it
wants the airline to launch a direct flight between Durban and Mumbai.
The Indian airline already flies from OR Tambo International Airport to
Mumbai.
Emirates is the only international airline that is
currently using the King Shaka airport. The R7.2 billion facility,
which is housed together with the Dube Tradeport 35km outside Durban,
can accommodate 7.5 million passengers a year.
President Jacob
Zuma, who officially launched the airport at the weekend, added that
the government’s trade strategy prioritised greater integration with
countries of the South. He said the new airport and the trade hub were
well positioned to capture these markets.
Since it started
operating at the beginning of the month, King Shaka has seen more than
15 000 passengers come through its gates on more than 700 flights.

Hlahla said the facility had been delivered with precision and
excellence by the 8 000 workers who built it from scratch over a period
of 33 months. Besides ensuring that there was enough traffic coming
through the airport, Hlahla highlighted two other challenges that she
said still had to be addressed.”It is about the sale of the land (the
site of the old Durban International Airport). I run a small business
compared with government and I need them to finalise the sale of the
land so I can put the money back into the business and I can afford to
pay my debts,” said Hlahla.
“The other issue is that many people
don’t realise how much the aviation industry contributes to growth. We
need government policy to create an enabling environment for the
industry to grow and to be sustainable. I am referring to a number of
things like the regulatory environment.”
Acsa is unhappy with the
way that its tariffs are determined and it has approached the courts as
it wants to change the regulatory structure.
Transport Minister Sbu
Ndebele said the old Durban International Airport site would be used to
park planes during the World Cup. The government would call for
expressions of interest from the public after the tournament to source
development ideas.
Zuma revived the idea of building a new
international airport in Durban 16 years ago when he was MEC for
economic development and tourism in KwaZulu-Natal. The plan had been
opposed under the apartheid government.
“There has never been any
doubt in my mind that this airport was the missing piece of the puzzle
to enable growth and development in this region and for our country.
More than 80 percent of our national economy is housed in the three
cities of Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban,” Zuma said.
“Durban,
however, was the only city that lacked the aviation infrastructure that
was able to accommodate long-haul international flights,” the president
added.

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