City
Epaper

AAI to invest Rs 25,000 crore on infra upgradation: Chairman Arvind Singh

By ANI | Updated: January 16, 2020 22:00 IST

The newly appointed chairman of Airports Authority of India (AAI) Arvind Singh on Thursday revealed to have a major infrastructure upgradation plan for next five years involving a whopping investment of Rs 25,000 crore.

Open in App

New Delhi [India], Jan 16 : The newly appointed chairman of Airports Authority of India (AAI) Arvind Singh on Thursday revealed to have a major infrastructure upgradation plan for next five years involving a whopping investment of Rs 25,000 crore.

"We need a huge amount of investment -- several billions of dollars - to ensure holistic infrastructure upgradation in the aviation sector across the country. We will invest about Rs 25,000 crore to augment facilities and infrastructure at the airports during the next five years," said Singh during an exclusive interview to here.

Talking about the growth in the number of flyers over the years, Singh said: "Currently we are handling 315 million passengers. It is expected that an additional 550 million passengers will be augmented, which takes the total traffic to around 900 million passengers. We have to go for capacity building accordingly."Commenting on the UDAN scheme, he said: "We are working on this scheme, which aims at building airports in unconnected regions of the country. The plan is to double the number of airports in the country. The major challenge under the UDAN scheme is that many routes have been awarded, but the bidders have not come to operationalise the routes. There is also a challenge to find newer routes."

UDAN or 'Ude Desh Ka Aam Nagrik' is a regional connectivity scheme launched by the Central government that aims to make unserved or underserved airports in small cities operational with regular flights, and offer subsidised airfares to encourage more people to fly.

On being asked about the privatisation of airports and the role of AAI, Singh said: "Privatisation is not new. The first privatisation bid was made when Mumbai and Delhi airports were privatised in 2005-06."

"The Greenfield airports were built by private players at Bengaluru, Hyderabad, and so on. Durgapur airport in West Bengal was built by a private player. Last year, the AAI recommended the Centre to privatise six more airports -- Amritsar, Varanasi, Bhubaneswar, Indore, Raipur and Trichy," he said.

"The process of privatisation helps reduce the cost of AAI. We are able to get revenues from the airports without deploying manpower. We are able to direct the funds towards unserved areas," Singh added.

Appreciating the growth in air traffic at Tier-II and Tier-III cities, Singh said: "The response we are getting from the state governments is tremendous. The growth rate of air traffic is double or triple as compared to the national pace of growth."

( With inputs from ANI )

Tags: Arvind SinghAAIindiaWest Bengal
Open in App

Related Stories

CricketBCCI Gives BIG Update on Shubman Gill’s Injury During India vs South Africa 1st Test at Eden Gardens

CricketShubman Gill Retires Hurt with Neck Sprain During India vs South Africa 1st Test at Eden Gardens (VIDEO)

NationalKolkata Fire: Major Blaze Erupts at Electronics Warehouse in West Bengal, No Casualties Reported (VIDEO)

CricketIND vs SA 1st Test: India Reach 37/1 at Stumps, Trail South Africa by 122 Runs in Kolkata; Jasprit Bumrah Stars With Five-For

CricketIND vs SA 1st Test: Jasprit Bumrah’s 5-Wicket Haul Helps India Bowl Out South Africa for 159 on Day 1

National Realted Stories

NationalMP: Govt shelves Mamleshwar Lok project after public protest

NationalKharge appoints four District Congress Committee presidents in Arunachal Pradesh

NationalDelhi: Traffic advisory issued for martyrdom day celebrations of Guru Tegh Bahadur

NationalKarnataka govt to submit new DPR for Mekedatu project: Dy CM Shivakumar

NationalManipur Guv reviews border-fencing work along India-Myanmar border