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17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Islie: 7:01am On May 11, 2020
• Facilities incur N26.1b deficit in three years

• How to overcome challenge, by stakeholders

At least 17 out of the 20 airports owned and managed by the Federal Government have turned out to be unviable and have operated at a loss for three years.

Except the trio of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport (MMIA), Lagos; Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (NAIA), Abuja; and Port Harcourt International Airport (PHIA), Rivers State, none of the other airports has sufficient revenue to cover the cost of operations alone.

Investigations by The Guardian showed that additional funding from high-traffic Lagos and Abuja airports’ excess revenue to the tune of N26.1 billion cushioned the operational cost deficits incurred by the unviable airports in 2017, 2018 and 2019.

With zero revenue being recorded following the lockdown occasioned by the coronavirus pandemic and recent flight restrictions for another four weeks, the Federal Government is in a dilemma on what to do with the airports; either to keep running them at a loss regardless of liability or temporarily closing them till the economy and passenger traffic start looking up.

Apparently due to the political uproar that forbids shutdown, some stakeholders have urged the government to expedite the concession programme for the airports, and attendant restructuring of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) for sustainability.

FAAN owns and manages all the public airports in the country on behalf of the Federal Government. Among them are 20 that are directly owned by the Federal Government and four state-owned airports.

A fact-sheet of revenue and expenditure of the 20 federal airports and FAAN headquarters in the last three years, obtained by The Guardian, showed huge revenue shortfall and deficits across the board.

For instance, the Kaduna International Airport that was upgraded during the 2017 closure of Abuja airport has in the last three years pooled a total of N1.027 billion in generated revenue. Of the sum, N716.7 million was collected. However, the expenditure was in excess of N4.41 billion, leaving a deficit of N3.69 billion.

The Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport, Kano, did not fare better. The airport in 2017, 2018 and 2019 pooled a total of N8.28 billion in generated revenue and collected N7.16 billion but its expenditure totalled N9.6 billion, leaving a shortfall of N2.44 billion.

The Kastina Airport managed to make a total of N250.8 million in generated revenue in three years, out of which only N42.1 million was collected. Its cost of operations was put at N1.58 billion, leaving a deficit balance of N1.54 billion.

In the same situation, Sokoto Airport had a total of N725.7 million generated revenue, out of which N400.1 million was collected. The cost of operation was in excess of N2.71 billion, which gave a shortage of N2.31 billion.

In the South, Ibadan airport in three years made a total of N349.2 million in generated revenue and collected N244.9 million. The expenditure amounted to N1.39 billion with a deficit of N1.14 billion. Ilorin International Airport generated a total of N437.1 million revenue in three years and collected N264.2 million. The expenditure was in excess of N2.453 billion, giving a shortfall of N2.19 billion.

Ditto for Akure airport. The facility pooled a total of N175.8 million in generated revenue and collected N168.7 million. But the expenditure was N1.06 billion, leaving a difference of N893.7 million.

The Benin airport in Edo State also ran at a loss. The airport generated a total of N993.2 million in three years and collected N930.1 million. The total cost of operations was put N2.02 billion, leaving a shortfall of N1.09 billion.

The Margaret Ekpo International Airport, Calabar, had a total of N540.8 million generated revenue, though collected more put at N559.6 million, the expenditure was as much as N2.50 billion, giving a deficit of N1.94 billion.

Similarly, Sam Mbakwe International Cargo Airport, Owerri, amassed a total of N1.25 billion in generated revenue and collected N1.08 billion. Expenditure was, however, N2.50 billion, with a shortage of N1.42 billion.

The Guardian learnt that the poor revenue and zero profit sprees were not unconnected with the perennially low traffic inflow in and out of the airports.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) lately stated that for an airport to be viable and self-sustaining, it must have at least five million passengers a year. Today, only Lagos and Abuja airports could boast of at least five million passengers annually.

Apparently without consideration for viability, some state governments, like Abia and Ekiti, are bent on building new airports.

Meanwhile, the Federal Government is at a crossroads on what to do with the airports that are still operating at a loss. The 2016 plan to concession the airport is still on, yet sustaining all the airports at FAAN’s N4 billion monthly overhead is a tough call during lean times.

A temporary closure of some of the airports was considered but not feasible given the political hullabaloo that awaits such a move, The Guardian has learnt.

Aviation consultant and Chief Executive Officer of Beljune Konzult Limited, Chris Aligbe, said it was expedient for the Federal Government to keep supporting FAAN and other regulatory and service providers with grant, pending the time the airlines will return to pre-coronavirus capacity.

Aligbe said aviation infrastructure abhored temporary shutdown. More so, they are readymade tools in the hand of politicians. He observed that some of the unviable government-owned airports were built by state governments for political aggrandizement.

“It was after building them that they found that they did not have resources to run them and quietly pushed them to the Federal Government through the back door. That was how they got into the care of FAAN.

“But we cannot shut them down, especially for political reasons. It is never going to be easy. If you try to do that, the impact will be more on the northern airports than on the south. The airport in the south that has become the ghost of its old self is that in Calabar. It records only one flight a day since Donald Duke left as governor of Cross River State. The Uyo Airport has taken over. Owerri is bubbling. Enugu will pick up because, at a time, it was behind Lagos and Abuja, even ahead of Port Harcourt International Airport.

“But in the north, you will have to shut down Sokoto, Bauchi, Gombe, Minna, and Ilorin maybe, among others. In the west, maybe Akure. Hence, it becomes highly political and more dangerous. So, for the length of time that it will take the airlines to bounce back, the agencies and the airports will have to keep running with the government’s support,” Aligbe said.

The Secretary General of the Aviation of Safety Round Table Initiative (ASRTI), Group Capt. John Ojikutu (rtd), urged the government to concession all the airports, and not the big four alone, to run efficiently and profitably.

Ojikutu advised that the Lagos and Abuja airports should be concessioned in blocs with four or six others.

“Lagos could go with Kano and some others in the south but not Enugu or PHIA. Abuja could go with Enugu but not with PHIA. PHIA could go with Kaduna and others but not with any other mentioned.

“My idea of concession is only for the non-aeronautical. These include the passenger terminal buildings, cargo terminals, aircraft parking areas, car parks and tollgates. FAAN could become a holding company overseeing the concession airports on behalf of the government,” Ojikutu said.

The Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Aviation, Nnolim Nnaji, earlier called for the unbundling of FAAN ahead of the move to concession major airports. Nnaji said it was a glaring fact that Nigeria’s airports were not just underdeveloped, but grossly underutilised.

Indeed, FAAN headquarters in the last three years generated N16.10 billion in revenue and collected N15.02 billion. Its expenditure was put at N59.41 billion, leaving a deficit of N29.1 billion.

The Chairman, NIGAV Centre, Fortune Idu, said FAAN was overburdened with managing 22 airports and paying salaries of over 12,000 workers from the revenue generated by Lagos and Abuja airports.

Idu said it was only FAAN, among airport authorities in the world, that had such a peculiar business model of airport subsidisation.

According to him, the body remains critical to the “fragile aviation industry” and should be carefully considered and properly repositioned to save the industry.

https://m.guardian.ng/news/17-fg-airports-not-viable-may-shut-down-over-losses/

5 Likes

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by SeverusSnape(m): 7:02am On May 11, 2020
At least 17 out of the 20 airports owned and managed by the Federal Government have turned out to be unviable and have operated at a loss for three years.
Every sector under this administration is going down the drain.

68 Likes 6 Shares

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Olunmercy56(f): 7:15am On May 11, 2020
cry cry Very bad but it's better to close all the borders too, who knows why the increase of covid everyday

1 Like

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by GOFRONT(m): 7:16am On May 11, 2020
Upon all our wealth, Resources, Money........

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by salbis(m): 8:19am On May 11, 2020
Some of these airports are not economically viable. Imagine some airports service only one or two airplanes in a week. That is total waste in every economic sense. Some where created purely for political than economic reasons. This COVID-19 is revealing some of the things we pretend not to exist.

58 Likes 6 Shares

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Temptee101(m): 8:19am On May 11, 2020
shocked

Not only airports.

The whole zoo is not viable, it should be shutdown, broken into different fragments and auctioned on eBay for buyers.

55 Likes 6 Shares

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Raxxye(m): 8:19am On May 11, 2020
By the simple economics principles I learnt in high school, they should be shut down since they are not bringing profit.
What if the airports were privately owned, where would the owner get money to keep funding an unviable project and still remain in business? angry

26 Likes 2 Shares

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by COVIK19: 8:19am On May 11, 2020
Only mismanagement of funds and presence of incapable people heading important positions can cause such loss

48 Likes 1 Share

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by FunnyFamily1: 8:19am On May 11, 2020
angry
Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by festwiz(m): 8:20am On May 11, 2020
17 Airports?? How many Airports will be left operational after this?

1 Like

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by pawesome(m): 8:20am On May 11, 2020
lol
Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by OakConsultNG: 8:20am On May 11, 2020
The same goes for most of the 'national assets'

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6 Likes 2 Shares

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Slawormir: 8:20am On May 11, 2020
Damnnnnn niggarrr
Nice
Still on yesterday's birthday

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11 Likes

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by glowingflame7: 8:20am On May 11, 2020
Shut them down already. How would they be viable. Politicians just think, there's no airport in my state. Let's build one.
It's only big men that will land in ibadan airport. Or owerri airport. Or katsina airport. How much is plane ticket? How safe is the airline? Why fly to the state? These are some factors to consider. Not just share airport geopolitically.

20 Likes 1 Share

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Grace001: 8:21am On May 11, 2020
It’s new, almost all government parastatals is not viable except for few.

Yet we still have huge debts to pay to our loaners.

Always a failed country

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Nobody: 8:21am On May 11, 2020
.

4 Likes

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by ForeThinker: 8:21am On May 11, 2020
Damnit Niccur

1 Like

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by jericco1(m): 8:22am On May 11, 2020
They should sell them rather than allow it to remain redundant... Just 20 airports in the whole of Nigeria we cannot even make operational. This country is not good at anything.

15 Likes

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by coins501(m): 8:22am On May 11, 2020
Buhari's government is one of the biggest scams of the 21st century. How this dull man managed to fool very enlightened Nigerians to vote him in 2015 is still a mystery.

15 Likes 3 Shares

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Zooposki(f): 8:22am On May 11, 2020
Give them to the states to manage or sell to private individuals.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by INTEGRITYA1(m): 8:22am On May 11, 2020
If they are not productive and it's obvious there chances of survival is very slim. They should be shut down with immediate alacrity.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by platido(m): 8:22am On May 11, 2020
Nigeria which way forward

1 Like

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Homiesjinxbank: 8:23am On May 11, 2020
You guys voted in the wrong set of people, APC has nothing to offer

8 Likes 3 Shares

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by mrvitalis(m): 8:23am On May 11, 2020
Lol greed and Evy ...u left where u should build airport to build them where they are not needed


Please please and please ...imo airport is not , has never been and would never be a federal airport ....imo people donated money to build that airport ...so please get it out of that list

14 Likes 1 Share

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Hoephase: 8:23am On May 11, 2020
Enugu airport has entered voicemail be that oooh.

God "airpus ooh"

1 Like

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Mizwisdom(f): 8:23am On May 11, 2020
Many more job losses ahead, brace up people

2 Likes

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by 4four(m): 8:23am On May 11, 2020
This is what you get when you used politics to allocate resources instead of viability. There are some state with this airport that supposes still be local govt but because of politics and greediness, everybody yanch don de open now that Niger delta oil is turning to pure water, nobody go tell anybody now b4 de restructure the country

6 Likes 2 Shares

Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by Nickymichy(m): 8:23am On May 11, 2020
Privatise it and see miracle
Re: 17 FG Airports Not Viable, May Shut Down Over Losses by sylve11: 8:24am On May 11, 2020
Difficult times, but all will be well at last. cool

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