Tag: Abuja airport

  • Lessons from Abuja Airport runway repairs

    Lessons from Abuja Airport runway repairs

    In December, 2016 alone the facility handled about 5000 domestic flights justifying its rating as the second busiest airport in the country after the Murtala Muhammed Airport (MMA) in Lagos. Completed in 2000 and officially opened for operations in 2002, the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, recorded a growth in passenger movement at the facility from 2, 126, 645 in 2005 to 4, 341, 637 in 2015. Yet, this critical facility’s runway, designed and built to last for 20 years had, before the advent of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration, functioned for 35 years without undergoing the requisite periodic, comprehensive maintenance. It was thus inevitable that critical portions of the runway had completely failed constituting a danger to flight and passenger safety and necessitating its closure for six weeks from March 8 this year to enable far reaching repairs and upgrade.

    Of course, it would have been easier and more convenient to assume that since no major air mishap had ever occurred at the airport, luck would continue to smile on the facility and all would always be well. Unfortunately, as several air crashes in the nation’s aviation history has shown, once an ordinarily avoidable air fatality is allowed to occur through complacency, neglect or carelessness, the consequences are eternally irreversible. It would also have been perhaps more preferable and popular with the flying public if the airport had been allowed to continue to function normally while necessary repairs were carried out piecemeal possibly at night. The federal aviation authorities however deserve commendation for firmly standing by the decision to completely shut down the airport for the stipulated period while preparing the Kaduna Airport as an effective although admittedly inconvenient alternation for the duration of the Abuja airport repairs.

    As the Minister of State for Aviation, Senator Hadi Sirika, rightly said at the time in reaction to popular opposition to the closure of the airport, “The total architecture of the runway failed touching on the safety component of our operations which we cannot negotiate. So we better stay safe than do something stupid. We decided to close down the airport and make a total rehabilitation of the runway itself in the interest of safety”. Apart from the distance of about 200km between Kaduna and Abuja and the rampant incidence of criminality on the road, most people were pessimistic as regards the possibility of the six-week deadline being met for the reopening of the Abuja facility. This was a reflection of a chronic and largely justifiable lack of confidence in the ability of public authorities in Nigeria to meet set objectives within specified timelines.

    To the surprise of all, however, work on the Abuja airport was completed ahead of schedule and the facility was opened for use a day before it was formally expected to resume operations on April 18. The new Abuja airport runway was reconstructed using new technology such as glass glide for the first time in the country to reinforce its durability and prevent surface cracks. Apart from the runway, other facilities have either being newly provided or upgraded at the facility to meet the global protocol on standard and best practices set by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). Lift and escalators for the aged and physically challenged persons have been provided at the departure hall of Terminal B. A new terminal, the D wing, which had long been abandoned has been rehabilitated, equipped and put in use complete with its own fingers for flight boarding. The local B wing and the international C wing have been given a comprehensive face-lift including the overhauling of their air conditioning systems and provision of new toilets, VIP lounges and other ancillary facilities.

    However, the cost of allowing the Abuja airport runway to deteriorate over the years due to lack of maintenance was the expenditure of another N3.2 billion on the preparation of the Kaduna Airport to serve as an alternative. But this has luckily not been a waste after all. For, the Kaduna Airport has now been substantially upgraded and now enjoys an expanded and improved runway, enhanced fire cover, more efficient instrument landing system, improved air space services and weather reports, the repair of its Voice Omni-directional Radio Range (VOR) and other navigational aids and the completion of a previously abandoned passenger terminal.

    In order to ensure that the Kaduna Airport does not lapse into disuse thus frittering away these gains, it would certainly be wise for the aviation authorities to commit additional funds to further modernization of the facility. The experience of the last six weeks has shown that Kaduna can be a viable aviation route if the necessary facilities and conditions are made available. The new Kaduna-Abuja train line, started by the preceding Jonathan administration and completed by this government, improvement on the road between the two cities, provision of free shuttle bus service and the maintenance of tight security facilitated the smooth and safe movement of arrivals at Kaduna Airport to Abuja.

    The cooperation and harmonious operations of the Ministries of Transport; Power, Works and Housing; the Kaduna State government and Julius Berger Plc, which made the completion and reopening of the project ahead of schedule possible is laudable. Surely, the more we have of this kind of inter-governmental and inter-agency rapport rather than the needless conflict, rivalry and turf wars that has been a huge distraction to the Buhari administration,  the more effective and productive use will be made of what remains of its tenure.

    President Buhari has expressed his appreciation to the Ethiopian government for that country’s extraordinary cooperation with Nigeria during the period that the Abuja airport was closed. Unlike most other International carriers that refused to fly to Kaduna, Ethiopian Airlines was reportedly the first to land an aircraft at the Kaduna airport on the very day the Abuja airport was closed and consistently maintained its operation on the route for the stipulated six weeks. The Airline’s Airbus A350 was also the first to land at the repaired Abuja runway on the very day it reopened. This is certainly an inspiring indication of the immense possibilities of inter-African cooperation if the political will and commitment can be mustered.

    Given the over N400 billion reportedly expended by the Dr Goodluck Jonathan administration on the expansion and modernization of 17 domestic and five international airports across the country, including a $1 billion Chinese loan for the same purpose, it is amazing that most of our airports are in the state they are today. Yet, rather than continue to whine and moan over the mess inherited, the aviation authorities simply went ahead to do what they had to do to enhance the operational safety of the Abuja airport. This is the kind of spirit Nigerians expect to see from the Buhari administration in the days ahead.

     

    Federal University, Oye Ekiti shows the light

    As a young member of the Editorial Board of the defunct Daily Times in the mid eighties, I benefitted enormously from the presence of the then Dr. Kayode Soremekun as a visiting member of the Board.

    The political scientist, international relations expert and specialist in the national and global politics of oil was then on sabbatical from the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University). His contributions on the board were radical, enlightening, uncompromising, irreverent and penetrating. One of the articles I remember him writing for the Daily Times was titled ‘Nigeria and the Pertamina affair’ in which he likened the opacity and corruption that characterized the management of Nigeria’s oil sector under the Babangida regime to that of Indonesia’s graft ridden state owned Pertermina oil corporation. In another piece, titled ‘Bitter Life’, he descended heavily on the then flamboyant First Lady, the late Mrs Maryam Babangida’s  Better Life for Rural Women pet project describing it as of little relevance to the lives of millions of poverty stricken Nigerian women. It certainly took great courage to write such articles under military rule and on the platform of a paper like the Daily Times.

    At the inception of the Buhari administration, Professor Kayode Soremekun was appointed Vice Chancellor of Federal University, Oye Ekiti (FUOYE). I am not surprised at the choice of three eminent Nigerians who will on Saturday, 29th of this month be conferred with honorary degrees by the university. They are a centenarian and retired principal of Ekiti Parapo College, Ido-Ekiti, Chief Adepoju Akomolafe; 89-year-old retired principal of Christ’s School, Ado Ekiti, Chief Francis Daramola and the first indigenous principal of Queen’s College, Lagos, Efunjoke Coker. They will be conferred with honorary Doctor of Educational Administration in recognition of their contributions to education, scholarship and manpower development in Nigeria. Justifying the decision at a pre-convocation briefing, Professor Soremekun submitted that honorary degrees should not be reserved exclusively for politicians and moneybags arguing that “The gesture is to remember these great Nigerians, who contributed to scholarship. It is sad that we are all suffering from amnesia which makes us forget people so easily. With this, we will be setting a new moral standard for society”. Surely, FUOYE is commendably showing the light for others to find the way.

  • Airlines release flight  schedules for Abuja airport

    Airlines release flight schedules for Abuja airport

    Airlines are elated to resume operations at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NNIA) Abuja today, 44 days after flights were diverted to pave the way for the repair of its runway.
    The euphoria among the carriers, it was gathered, followed the mixed feelings that trailed their operations for six weeks, when Kaduna Airport was used as alternate aerodrome.
    Besides low passenger traffic, increasing costs of operations and logistic challenges, it was learnt operations at Kaduna Airport was not all that satisfactory.
    Only yesterday, airlines including Air Peace, Medview Airlines, DANA Air and Ethiopian Airlines released their schedule of flights into and out of Abuja Airport.
    Hailing the Federal Government for keeping up to the timeline for the completion of the Abuja Airport runway repairs, the carriers also hailed passengers for their patience, patronage and understanding.
    Medview said it would operate six daily flights to the nation’s capital.
    In a statement by the Chief Operating Officer/Accountable Manager (COO/AM), Lukman Animasaun, an engineer, said besides the six daily flights, the flights to Yola, Kano and Maiduguri would now be routed through Abuja, which has been the practice.
    Animasaun said the closure of Abuja Airport brought out the potentials of Kaduna International Airport, making the airline to operate daily flight as against the three weekly flights.
    On its part, DANA Air said it would operate five daily flights into Abuja.
    The Accountable Manager of Dana Air, Mr. Obi Mbanuzuo, said: “We will commence flights to Abuja on Wednesday (today) and will operate five daily flights from Lagos to Abuja.”
    Air Peace also announced its flight schedule on the Abuja route.
    A statement issued by the carrier’s Corporate Communications Manager, Mr. Chris Iwarah, hailed air travellers for keeping faith with the airline and making a huge sacrifice to ensure repair of the bad portions of the runway of the Abuja airport.
    Ethiopian Airlines announced the resumption of its flight to Abuja Airport with its latest and the most modern airplane in the world, the Airbus A350-900 for the first time.

  • First aircraft lands in Abuja airport after runway rehabilitation

    First aircraft lands in Abuja airport after runway rehabilitation

    The Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, opened for flights on Tuesday six weeks after it was closed for runway repairs.

    The Minister of State, Aviation, Hadi Sirika, landed first on the rehabilitated runway on a Nigerian Police Force aircraft with registration number 5N- HAR, which flew in from Kaduna airport.

    An excited Sirika told journalists: “April 19, 2017 was the due date to conclude and open the airport based on our programme of work.

    “We were able to deliver the project earlier than anticipated so we cannot open late. There is nothing wrong in opening it a day earlier.

    “Here we are, we set out to achieve a target and we achieve the target.

    “We thank Allah for His benevolence. We are happy and thank Mr. President, His Excellency for his support, guidance and leadership.

    “And I also want to thank my colleagues who did it all, the media and the Nigeria people for bearing with us during the time of the closure.”

    Sirika said the runway is now in perfect shape.

     

     

  • Abuja Airport reopens tomorrow

    Abuja Airport reopens tomorrow

    After six weeks of closure for runway repairs, the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, will re-open for commercial flights operations tomorrow. The re-opening followed six weeks of low passenger traffic at the alternate airport in Kaduna.

    Minster of State for Aviation, Hadi Sirika, had vowed to resign his appointment if the project was not completed in record time.

    With the re-opening nine domestic carriers: Arik Air, Aero, Air Peace, Overland Airways, Dana Air, Medview, First Nation Airways and others will resume flights to Nigeria’s second largest airport.

    Five foriegn carriers namely: British Airways, South African Airways, Lufthansa, Air France/KLM that refused to fly into Kaduna will also resume flights.

    Investigations revealed that some airlines are already mobilising their workers back to Abuja for return of flights. A source hinted that many travel agents have started making bookings for flights in and out of Abuja ahead of the airport’s re-opening.

    Meanwhile, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), has carried out certfication of the runway in line with regulatory standards. The NCAA, it was learnt, has however, pointed out a few gaps to the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), which is being corrected. They are, however, not critical issues of safety that can jeopardise the re- opening of the airport.

  • Commercial flights resume in Abuja airport Wednesday

    Commercial flights resume in Abuja airport Wednesday

    FORTY-ONE days after its runway was shut for major repairs, the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NNIA), Abuja, will re- open today, Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) Managing Director Saleh Dunoma said yesterday.

    According to Dunoma, everything about the Abuja Airport runway was ready and awaiting the certification of the aerodrome by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) to ascertain compliance with operational standards.

    He said the certification will be completed in two days, before the airport runway will open for commercial flights on Wednesday.

    Dunoma told reporters that the two-day certification window will to allow NCAA to make corrections and on any area in line with civil aviation requirements.

    He said: “We will be ready by Monday (April 17, 2017). But, we are leaving the remaining two days for the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA). This is because the NCAA has to certify the airport that what we have done is in accordance with their standards.

    “After the NCAA does that, we will bring in the traffic. But if they do not, we have the opportunity of making corrections with the two days we have saved.”

    On the reopening of the runway on Wednesday, Dunoma said: “No doubt about that, we will open it as scheduled. Just as I have said, we have been working with the NCAA throughout the period. They have been making corrections. But, for formality, we need to check and make sure that all the necessary corrections meet the requirement of the civil aviation authority.

    “All the critical items of work are hundred per cent ready, except may be two items, which of course is the markings and the cleaning. Other critical item which is not serious work is the inspection by the NCAA who will come and certify that the repairs that had been carried out is satisfactory and give us the go ahead to bring in traffic to Abuja.

    “Asphalt work is hundred per cent complete; markings have reached almost seventy per cent; and the airfield lighting system has attained eighty per cent completion.”

    Responding to when the NCAA will carry out their inspection and certify the runway, he said: “We have written to them and they will come to do the preliminary inspection. If there is any observation as a result of the inspection, we will now make sure we carry out corrections.”

    On the terminal building: “We are improving on all the services there and repairing all the items that are bad. It will be ready by Monday (tomorrow). Most of the items there have been completed. We are just trying to clean up.”

    He said that FAAN has carried out other minor repairs at Abuja Airport, taking advantage of the closure as the perfect timing.

    Dunoma said: “There is additional work which has nothing to do with this repair but we are seizing the opportunity of the closure of the airport to do.

    This has to do with the APEX (Airport Excellence in Safety)-related items.  We are now levelling all the airfield lightings’ locations, all the installations and flash with the ground surface. In case of any skidding, there will not be concrete projection above the ground surface.”

    Concerning the calibration of Navigational Aids, he said: “We have not tampered with the Navids. We just worked on the runway. What we tampered with is the airfield lightings and the airfield lightings are being returned to the same position.

    “The runway does not need calibration. All we need to check is to make sure there is 100 per cent illumination. Calibration is done periodically. When the time comes for calibration, the appropriate authority will calibrate the Instrument Landing System (ILS).”

    The Abuja airport was shut on March 8 for six weeks to enable Julius Berger rebuild the 3.6-kilometre runway.

    The runway, which was constructed in 1982 was meant to last for 20 years, but had been in use for 35 years without major repairs and maintenance.

  • ‘Abuja airport runway 95% ready’

    ‘Abuja airport runway 95% ready’

    •Minister: Buhari has okayed second runway

    THE runway of Nnamdi Azikwe International Airport, Abuja is 95 per cent completed, Minister of State for Aviation Hadi Sirika said yesterday.
    Sirika promised that the April 19 date for the completion of the runway will not fail.
    He spoke in Abuja on a radio programme, tagged: ‘Political platform’, monitored by The Nation.
    Few weeks ago, Sirika and the Minister of Information, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, inspected the entire stretch from runway 04 to runway 022 and saw the work being done at each point, expressing satisfaction at the pace of work.
    Yesterday, the minister said: “We are now about 95 per cent completion of the Abuja Airport runway. We are finishing the laying of asphalt today. We had about two days of rain, which disturbed the ongoing work. But we are working and we are going to get to the due date, which is on April 19, 2017, God willing. Other works like the lightening, markings among others have been going on simultaneously.
    “There is a new technology, where glass glide is put in the process of constructing the runway to reinforce it, to give it extra strength and prevent cracks and that is what we have done at the Abuja airport runway. This is the first time any Nigerian runway is being treated with such material and that material is a 50 tonner. We had to fly it in to Nigeria to ensure that it comes in time for this job and you have seen samples of it.
    “I am very happy and I thank Nigerians for bearing with us and also thank President Muhammadu Buhari for believing in us that we can do it and he gave us the trust to do it.”
    The runway being reconstructed at the cost of N5.8 billion by Julius Berger was closed on March 8, 2016.
    The minister pleaded with those doing business in the Abuja airport over their loss.
    “The responsibility is on us to ensure that all is well. You know that we cannot be 100 per cent perfect. But if you are 95 or 96 per cent, that can pass. We apologise to those at the Abuja airport. They must have lost revenue within the period of six weeks.
    “However, some of them were creative enough to move to the Kaduna Airport. I have seen several people who have moved to Kaduna. Many may lose but many also gain. We will provide better service because once the airport is save, many more people will come to them to do business,” he said.
    Sirika added that President Muhammadu Buhari has directed everyone to plan for the construction of the second runway in Abuja airport.

  • Abuja Airport runway repair on course – Osinbajo

    Abuja Airport runway repair on course – Osinbajo

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Friday expressed confidence that the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, would be reopened on April 19.

    He made the remark during an inspection tour of the airport.

    Osinbajo, according to a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, said “I have looked round and I think that from what I have seen and also from the information from the contractors and consultants, things are going very well.

    “We are told that we are nearing completion and we are clearly on schedule. We expect to see that this will be completed well on schedule. I don’t think we should expect any delays whatsoever.

    “We have assurances from the consultants that we are clearly on schedule, so by the 19th of this month, a new runway should be settled.

    “I have no reservations. I think that by just looking at all of this myself, inspecting it and listening to the consultants, contractors,  personnel from FAAN and the Ministry of Transport, I think that a lot of work has gone in here.

    “The contractors are doing 24 hour shifts, working round the clock. I think they have taken the job very seriously and we expect to see that this will be done and completed by the 19th as they have promised.”

    On move to upgrade the terminal building to standard, the vice president added “FAAN has said it is ready starting to do something. They say they have started to do some work. “

  • Abuja Airport runway ‘is 57.5% ready’

    Abuja Airport runway ‘is 57.5% ready’

    The reconstruction of the runway of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, has reached 57.5 per cent completion, mid-way into the six weeks earmarked for the project.

    “Work is going on smoothly as you can see. We have taken you round and everything is in order,” Minister of State for Aviation Hadi Sirika  said when Minister of Information Culture and Tourism Lai Mohammed led reporters on a tour of the project.

    “The contractor has mobilised fully and we have now gone about 57.5 per cent of the total work, which is good, which shows that we are on course, which shows that we are on time, which shows that we are doing what we are supposed to do to ensure that the runway is opened come 19th of April,” he said.

    Sirika said that in addition to the opening of the runway at the expiration of the six-week target, an upgraded terminal to ensure passenger comfort, in line with the protocol of the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), will also be ready.

    “This airport will be opened come 19th of April and it will not only be opened at the time but the terminal building will wear a new look. We are doing a complete rehabilitation of Terminal D of the International Airport. We will put escalators and lifts at the terminal and also we are opening a lounge for the physically challenged and the elderly.

    Sirika said work on the runway is also going on simultaneously with lighting installation and laying of cables, which have also reached an advanced stage.

    He said for the first time in Nigeria, glasphalt – a variety of asphalt that uses crushed glass – was being used to reinforce the runway and also prevent cracks.

    Mohammed said the tour was aimed at providing first-hand experience for the journalists on the progress so far made on the reconstruction of the runway.

  • Abuja airport runway ‘not extended by 18 weeks’

    Abuja airport runway ‘not extended by 18 weeks’

    ‘Airport repairs 40 per cent completed’

    •Mohammed, Sirika meet aviation experts in Lagos

    The Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) and Julius Berger, the contractor handling the repair of Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja runway, said yesterday that the work is 40 per cent completed.
    They spoke in Abuja yesterday when members of the House of Representatives Committee on Aviation, led by its chairman, Mrs. Nkeiruka Onyejeocha, inspected the project.
    Resident Engineer, FAAN Mr. Yemi Ayelesan, told the committee that the hardest part of the work, which is mailing of the 3.6 kilometres runway, had been completed.
    He explained that the laying of fibre glide rubber’’, which prevents water from going deep underground and also prevent runway from cracking has also been completed.
    Ayelesan told the committee that the contractors are working to specifications and would deliver on schedule, expressing confidence that the six weeks period for reopening of the airport was feasible.
    According to him, the contractors are working round the clock to ensure that they meet the deadline.
    He said the repair work was a total reconstruction and not partial rehabilitation, explaining that the entire runway had been excavated for laying of asphalt.
    He said there were isolated areas that were so bad that required digging deeper beyond mailing and laying of asphalt, stating that the entire surface were mailed to a certain depth.
    According to him, there is nothing like partial rehabilitation, even the taxi way is being repaired.
    “Laying asphalt does not take time; it is the easiest part of the work.
    “The lighting system is the next step, and the cable can be fixed within two days. As things are now, we will start fixing the light cable on March 29,’’ he said.
    Project Manager, Julius Berger Dr. Lai’s Richter said the work was being done in line with the programme of work.
    Richter said the fixing of the lighting cable would commence on Wednesday, restating that the runway repairs would be completed before April 19 deadlines.
    The Chairman of the House Committee said their visit was to seek explanation on the level of work done so far in line with the project agreement.

    Minister of Information and Culture Lai Mohammed and his Aviation counterpart, Hadi Sirika, yesterday clarified that the Federal Government has not extended the deadline for the completion of the Abuja Airport runway by 18 weeks.

    The ministers said the first phase of the runway repairs will be completed on April 19 as promised by the government.

    They spoke yesterday at a stakeholders’ conference in Lagos, where they met members of the Aviation Roundtable Safety Initiative (ART).

    Sirika said he would tender his resignation, if the contractors fail to meet the deadline.

    He stressed that the airport runway was scheduled to be completed within a six-month period and that the airport must be opened for flights to land safely after six weeks of closure.

    He said: “We chose Julius Berger because they have been in the site already. We have tested them before. Nigeria will not forgive us, if we fail to meet up the six weeks period. I will resign, if I don’t meet the deadline of six weeks.”

    According to the minister, the ongoing work has incurred extra N150 million, which was used by the contractors to charter planes that was used to ferry some of the equipment used in the repair works.

    Sirika said when completed, the Abuja runway will be used in excess of 10 Years.

    He said President Muhammadu Buhari has a soft spot for aviation.

    “PMB has a soft spot for Aviation. He takes it very seriously. During the transition period, he always asks of aviation. Even during his political campaigns, he was interested in aviation.

    “The president believed I will not be that stupid to take such huge commitment that concerns over 180 million people. Many people, including the National Council of Engineers, believed we can do it and they gave us all the necessary supports,” Sirika said.

     

    He noted that the Federal Government has done everything possible to ensure the comfort and safety of passengers.

    “Transport to and from Abuja and Kaduna is free. The expressway has been rehabilitated. Life is paramount and guaranteed,” he said.

     

    On maintenance plans for the runway, the minister added: “There will be periodic maintenance. We have directed NCAA and FAAN for a manual for the periodic maintenance. We will come out with programmes because the ones they had before is not satisfactory. All other runways will also be taken care of. Each and every airport or landing strip is very important and that is why they need to be done so that it can be safe.”

    Speaking at the event, Mohammed said: “We are here today in continuation of our interaction with major stakeholders in the aviation sector, designed primarily to keep them, and by extension all Nigerians, informed on all issues surrounding the closure of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja and the temporary diversion of all Abuja flights to Kaduna International Airport.

    “What we are doing here today is in continuation of the efforts to carry Nigerians along and to keep them adequately informed about this whole issue of Abuja airport closure and the operations in Kaduna. We are here because we believe that members of the Aviation Round Table are major stakeholders; knowledgeable stakeholders, whose opinions are based on empirical evidence rather than sheer emotions.”

    Mohammed said  the Federal Government has done everything possible to ensure the comfort, safety and security of the travelling public during the six-week closure of the Abuja airport.

    “Transportation from Abuja to Kaduna and vice versa is free for air passengers, security along the Abuja-Kaduna expressway is such that there is a presence of security agents at short intervals. The expressway itself has been rehabilitated to ensure a smooth ride and, I can tell you, having travelled on that road at least twice since the relocation, that the ride is smooth. The safety and security of passengers at the Kaduna airport are paramount and guaranteed, as attested to by many,” he said.

    The Information and Culture Minister said reconstruction of the Abuja airport runway is nearing its halfway mark and indications are that we are on course to re-open the Abuja airport for flight operations on schedule.

    “Kaduna airport is not the same as Abuja Airport. During this relocation, there is no way that the travelling public will not experience minimal discomfort. But, as a caring and responsible government, we have taken all the necessary measures to ease such discomfort. Thankfully, the efforts have paid off because operational disruptions have been minimal, despite the massive logistics involved in the relocation.

    “We lay no claims to perfection. That’s why we are here to meet with experts. We are ready to listen to them on what other measures they think we can put in place to make the operations in Kaduna smoother and, in the long run, to avoid this kind of total airport shutdown in the future.

    “Finally, finally, let me use this opportunity to debunk the erroneous report making the rounds that the closure of the Abuja airport has been extended by 18 weeks. This is not true. The six weeks’ time line for the closure remains. After six weeks, the Abuja airport will be reopened. The remaining work on the runway will not necessitate the closure of the airport.”

     

  • Abuja Airport: Second runway ‘ll be ready in 24 months, says minister

    Abuja Airport: Second runway ‘ll be ready in 24 months, says minister

    •Flight operation from Kaduna to London to begin soon

    The Federal Government has said the second runway at the Nnamdi Azikwe International airport, Abuja will be completed in 24 months, if it is accommodated in the 2017 budget.
    It added yesterday that flight operations from Kaduna International Airport would begin soon to reduce the hardship being experienced by passengers.
    Minister of State for Aviation, Hadi Sirika and Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, spoke after an inspection of activities at the Kaduna Airport.
    Speaking on the plan for a second runway, Sirika said: “There is plan by government to be able to squeeze in within the 2017 budget to have a second runway in Abuja.
    “But we need to learn from previous mistakes. Since 1995, I as a person was canvassing for second runway in Abuja and I saw the need. My concern at that time was safety because we didn’t have alternative landing point. I also thought it would make the airport more efficient.
    “I saw the need and called for it but it fell on deaf ears. At the time of Yar’Adua, government saw the need but the project was condemned on the excuse that the money was too much.”
    He added: “The media and others who complained would have complained about the expenditure but support the project. So, kill the cost and not the project. Don’t throw away the baby with the bath water.
    “So, yes, there would be a second runway in Abuja hopefully within the next 24 months, we would have a new runway, I hope.
    “There is second runway in Kano, Lagos and Port Harcourt. I think the focus of the government within the limited resources is to do a second runway in Abuja and if we need additional runway, during the concessioning, the man, who would win it will do it.
    “Once we begin the process of building the runway, we should be able to achieve it within 24 months. If we put it in the budget and we are to build it, we will try to build it within 24 months.
    On concession, he added: “The concession is a process and it is backed by the ICIC Act. It goes through processes. When you identify Transaction Advisers, which we have done, it is going to go to FEC tomorrow (today) and once that is done, the Outline Business Case (OBC) and then the full business scale and also get approval from FEC.”
    On how many years the runway undergoing reconstruction will last, the minister said the Federal Government got commitment from the contractors that the airport will last for over 10 years.
    On flight operations from Kaduna to London, he said: “We are however trying to start a flight from Abuja direct to London, using Nigerian carrier and some arrangements with international airlines and in the next four to five days, we may commence flight directly to London and back. We are talking to Nigerian entrepreneurs and international airlines that would provide us with the airplane that we would use.
    “For now, we would do London and it is because we already have one going to Addis Ababa and so, those who are East bound will be served. Also, if we have one going to Europe, then all those going to North and South America will also be served. We are just trying to cushion the suffering of passengers.
    “Those that however have permission to go into London are Omni Blue, Medview and Air Peace. Those are some of the carriers that are permitted to go into London and we are going to partner Nigerian entrepreneurs or airlines.”
    On whether the six weeks was still achievable, Sirika said: “We are on six weeks mark. I have been to the runway site four times since they started and they have been working. By next tomorrow, a huge countdown clock at the entrance of the airport and at the entrance of the yard of the contractor and on his desk to remind them that six-week is six-week and it is sacrosanct.”
    Also speaking, Mohammed said: “We have tried to limit the inconveniences to passengers. Again, there is no alternative to closing the runway for the simple reason that for 34 years, no maintenance was carried out.
    “No surface cleaning , resurfacing, no nothing and it has gotten to a stage that unless we reconstruct the runway, we would be sitting on a keg of gunpowder and God forbid any crash. That is why we had to take the painful decision to close the airport to allow for reconstruction of the runway.