Jomo Kenyatta International Airport
(JKIA) recorded a decline in the number of passengers, cargo and
aircraft in March compared with the same period last year, bringing to
doubt its status as a major regional hub.
Data from the
Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) indicates that the number of passengers
in the period under review reduced by six per cent to 530,000 from
560,000 in the same period last year.
The volume of
cargo handled at the airport also went down by two per cent to 20.3
million tonnes from 20.7 million tonnes in March last year.
Subsequently,
aircraft movement declined by 0.4 per cent to 9,196 in March compared
with 9,232 in the corresponding period in 2016.
“Jomo
Kenyatta International Airport’s passenger throughput in March 2017
decreased by six per cent from the figure recorded same month in 2016 to
hit 530,439 passengers,” says airports statistics for March.
“Aircraft
movement decreased by 0.4 per cent to record a movement of 9,196
aircraft over the same period, while the amount of cargo handled
decreased by 2 per cent to stand at 20,372,883.0 Kgs recorded over the
period under review,” adds the report.
Underutilised
capacity at JKIA has previously been blamed for the dwindling volumes of
cargo at the facility. The cargo capacity at JKIA is 5,000 tonnes a
week but only 3,000 is utilised every week as the rest lies idle.
The decline comes at a time when Kenya has embarked on
expansion spree of the facility as it targets to make it a major transit
hub for both regional and other flights outside Africa.
New
arrival terminals 1E and 1A are currently operational at the JKIA,
marking a major step in the ongoing expansion and modernisation of the
region’s busiest airport, with passenger arrivals projected to climb.
The
government has set aside Sh8.5 billion for the modernisation of JKIA in
this year’s budget to be used in expanding terminal 1B, C and D.
Plans
are also afoot to construct the second runway to enable the airport to
handle larger aircrafts as the current one has no capacity.
Mombasa-based
Moi International Airport recorded an impressive performance in the
period under review with the cargo sector growing significantly.
The report indicates that the volumes of cargo handled grew by 103 per cent from 153,000 to 311,000 in March this year.
Passenger
movement increased by three per cent to 114,003. Coastal Kenya is a
favourite tourist destination among the locals and international
visitors, with most of them landing at JKIA before transiting to
Mombasa.
The airport will receive a major boost next
year following plans by Qatar Airways to launch direct flights between
Mombasa and Doha next year.
The Middle East carrier,
which already operates daily flights to Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport (JKIA), says Mombasa is among the 12 new
destinations it will launch in 2018.
The State-owned
Qatar joins international carriers such as Ethiopian Airlines, Turkish
Airlines and RwandAir which currently fly directly into the coastal city
of Mombasa.
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