AAI writes to govt. seeking land for runway expansion

It has offered to pay for the land to expand runway by another 600 metres

September 12, 2017 12:03 am | Updated 12:03 am IST - Puducherry

Major hurdles: Sources in the AAI are not upbeat about the expansion of the Puducherry airport runway in the wake of huge cost involved.

Major hurdles: Sources in the AAI are not upbeat about the expansion of the Puducherry airport runway in the wake of huge cost involved.

The Airports Authority of India, Puducherry, has submitted a proposal to the territorial administration to acquire around 200 acres of land in Tamil Nadu for expanding the runway by another 500 to 600 metres.

The report was submitted to the Tourism Department three weeks ago, detailing the land required for expanding the runway from the existing 1,502m to 2,000m to operate wide-bodied aircraft.

The runway ends near the border of Tamil Nadu and any expansion would need cooperation from that State. The Airports Authority of India would bear the acquisition cost, a senior government official told The Hindu .

The last expansion of the runway from 1,222 metres to its present size was done in 2007 after the territorial administration handed over 20 hectares of land to AAI.

Sources in the airport and AAI said they were not very optimistic about the proposal to expand the runway by 500 metres to 600 metres because of the huge cost involved in the work taking into account the topography on Tamil Nadu side.

The land belonging to Tamil Nadu towards right side of the airport terminal was a valley and filling the gorge would need a huge investment, said an AAI official.

Demand for more flights

A section of the employees in the airport wanted the territorial administration to take more steps to bring more smaller aircraft similar to the one operated by SpiceJet in the Puducherry-Hyderabad sector.

The low-cost private player resumed operations to Hyderabad last month by putting one of its 78-seater Bombardier aircraft into service.

AAI officials in the airport and ground staff of the private player stationed here are enthused about the prospects after seeing the patronage the sector received since the first flight took off from the airport on August 16.

“While on weekdays the airline registered 60% passenger load factor, on weekends the load factor is more than 70%.

On several days, the load factor was 100%. For an aircraft operating under UDAN scheme, the present load factor is reasonably sufficient,” an employee of SpiceJet told The Hindu .

After it receives new four Bombardier aircraft in October, the operator would take a call on adding more sectors from here. “Definitely, the Bengaluru sector is our priority for any operational expansion,” the employee added.

AAI sources added that Air Odhisha as per the agreement with Ministry of Civil Aviation has to commence its service in the allotted sector — Chennai-Puducherry-Salem-Bengaluru — before September 30.

“If they are not going to start the service before the stipulated time, the Ministry may enter into agreement with another operator,” the source added.

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