Asaba International Airport Explained

Asaba International Airport
Iata:ABB
Icao:DNAS
Pushpin Map:Nigeria
Pushpin Mapsize:200
Pushpin Mark:Airplane_silhouette.svg
Pushpin Label:ABB
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of Airport in Nigeria
Type:Civil[1] /Public/Midsize[2]
City-Served:Asaba, Nigeria
Location:Asaba, Delta State
Elevation-F:305
Coordinates:6.2042°N 6.6653°W
Metric-Rwy:y
R1-Number:11/29
R1-Length-M:3,400
R1-Surface:Asphalt
Footnotes:Sources: GCM Google Maps[3]
Website:https://asabaairport.com/
Operator:Asaba Airport Company
Focus City:Lagos, Abuja, Kano
Timezone:(GMT+1)

Asaba International Airport (IATA: ABB, ICAO: DNAS):[4] is an international airport serving Asaba and the whole of the Delta State, Nigeria, and other nearby cities.[5] It is located approximately 7.9 kilometers (4.9 mi) east of the city centre of Asaba.[6]

The airport officially opened on 13 July 2011.

Asaba airport connects the commercial cities of Lagos, Port Harcourt, Abuja, Kano and Onitsha.[7] It also serves other cities within the South-East and South-South region and is regulated by the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority and was upgraded to Category 6 status in April 2010. Asaba Airport has reopened for commercial and charter airlines.[8] On 23 February 2021, the Delta State Government ceded the management of the airport to Asaba Airport Company by signing a 30-year concession agreement.[9]

History

Asaba International Airport was first conceptualized in 2007 by the administration of Chief James Onanefe Ibori (1999–2007).[10] The overarching objective was to build a standard passenger and cargo airport infrastructure in Asaba, Delta State, capable of handling codes C, D and E aircraft, and to serve as an additional source of revenue for the state.[11] Asaba location was selected for the airport because of the strategic position of Asaba as the gateway to the South-East and Niger-Delta region.[12] However, the Ibori administration could not embark on the project.

The Okowa Administration embarked on rehabilitation work, which included the construction of a new runway, setting up an instrument landing system and field lighting to have the airport return to 24-hour operations. It was completed and the airport was upgraded to Category 6 by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA).[13] [14]

Upon completion of the facility upgrade, the Okowa administration commissioned a feasibility study, revealing that it would be about 85% more expensive for the government to operate the upgraded airport to its full potential and that a private sector partnership was needed to fund the airport operation.[15] The Delta State Government decided to expand and modernize the airport facilities under a Private-Public Partnership arrangement.[16]

Concession

Following the upgrade of the airport facility and the government’s intent to invite private sector participation, the Delta State Government issued a Request for Proposal to select a Transaction Adviser and in March 2016, Delta State Executive Council approved the appointment of HALCROW Infrastructure Consortium as the Transaction Adviser to the Government to midwife the concessioning of Asaba International Airport.[17]

On 23 February 2021, Asaba Airport Company signed a 30-year concession agreement with the Delta State Government after a rigorous and transparent selection process.[18]

Key highlights of the concession

Upon the signing of the concession agreement, a Project Delivery Oversight Committee (PDOC) consisting of five members, including the Concessionaire Representative, two employees of the Concessionaire and two persons appointed by the Delta State Government, was established within 30 days of the execution of the agreement. The PDOC is responsible for ensuring that the terms of the concession agreement are duly satisfied, and it shall be the single point of contact for the Concessionaire for all matters concerning the agreement. The PDOC was also responsible for overseeing the six-month transition period. The transition period ensured a seamless transfer of the operations and management of the airport to Asaba Airport Company. The handover of the management of Asaba International Airport to Asaba Airport Company was performed in a symbolic ceremony on 22 August 2021.[19]

The Delta State Government is the vested owner of Asaba International Airport and by virtue of the executed concession agreement has conceded the development, operation and management of the airport to Asaba Airport Company[20] Limited for a period of 30 years. The management of the airport covers all airside infrastructure, key airport facilities and all landside infrastructure.[21]

Infrastructure

Runways

Asaba operates as a single-runway airport (11/29) with a length of 3,400 meters and a width of 45 meters. Runway 11 is equipped with a Category 1 runway lighting system consisting of approach lights, runway edge lights, runway centerline lights, runway threshold lights and taxiway lights. Precision approach path indicators (PAPI) are installed on both sides of runway 11.

!Runway!Length!Width!ILS!Notes
11/29

Notes and References

  1. Web site: DNAS/Asaba General Airport Information .
  2. Web site: Asaba International Airport | DNAS | Pilot info .
  3. Web site: Google Maps. Google Maps.
  4. Web site: Asaba International Airport | DNAS | Pilot info . Metar-taf.com . 2023-01-09.
  5. Web site: Asaba International Airport - POPULAR DESTINATIONS, TERMINALS AND NEARBY HOTELS .
  6. Web site: Asaba International Airport - Asaba, Delta . Wikimapia.org . 2023-01-09.
  7. Web site: Asaba International Airport Profile - CAPA. 2020-12-19. centreforaviation.com.
  8. Web site: Asaba Airport Gets First International Flight As Super Eagles Leaves for South Africa . Ndokwa Reporters . 16 November 2018. 2023-01-09.
  9. Web site: Delta State Signs Agreement to Concession Asaba International Airport - Arise News . Arise.tv . 2021-02-24 . 2023-01-09.
  10. Web site: Dec 11, 2013 . ASABA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT UNVEILED (SPECIAL REPORT:The Story of An Airport) . https://web.archive.org/web/20230103122534/https://flashpointnews.com/2013/12/11/asaba-international-airport-unveiled-special-reportthe-story-of-an-airport/ . Jan 3, 2023 . FlashPoint News.
  11. Aligbe, Chris (15 March 2021). "Asaba International Airport: Build-up to concession, issues, benefits" Vanguard News
  12. Sobowale, Dele (18 June 2012). "Fdi: Asaba Airport as case study – 4" Vanguard News
  13. Web site: Multi-billion Asaba International Airport remains inoperative 13 years after launch . 2 September 2021 .
  14. Web site: Oliomogbe . Hendrix . Asaba Airport Downgrade:The Big Task Before Okowa — Sunday Magazine — The Guardian Nigeria News – Nigeria and World News . Guardian.ng . 2015-05-10 . 2023-01-09.
  15. Web site: Asaba International Airport: Build-up to concession, issues, benefits. March 15, 2021. Vanguard News.
  16. Ogbogu, Awele (14 June 2022). "How Okowa Started And Is Finishing Strong As The Roadmaster" The Pointer. Archived from the original.
  17. Web site: Sense and Economics of Asaba Airport Concession – THISDAYLIVE . Thisdaylive.com . 2023-01-09.
  18. Web site: Shadare . Wole . Delta State, FIDC-Menzies sign 30 years Asaba airport concession pact . Aviation metric . 2021-02-23 . 2023-01-09.
  19. Web site: Agborh . Alphonsus . Delta formally hands over Asaba airport management to the company - Tribune Online . Tribuneonlineng.com . 2021-08-25 . 2023-01-09.
  20. Web site: Delta concessions Asaba airport to private investors . 23 February 2021 .
  21. News: Concessionaire Formerly Takes over Asaba Airport – THISDAYLIVE . 28 September 2022 . This Day . This Day . 27 September 2021.