‘Changi Airport’s prefunding plan for T5 objectionable’

epa06396729 A general view of check-in counters at the departure hall of Terminal 2 in Changi Airport, Singapore, 18 December 2017. Singapore's Changi Airport celebrates hitting a record 60 million passengers passing through the airport on 18 December 2017, 10 million more passengers from five years ago, marking its position as one of the world's top air hubs.  EPA-EFE/HOW HWEE YOUNG

Bloomberg

The airline industry’s most prominent trade body said it objects to any attempts by Singapore to charge travellers to help fund the construction of its new Terminal 5 in Changi Airport.
The International Air Transport Association is “strongly against any pre-financing of any infrastructure,” IATA CEO Alexandre de Juniac told a media roundtable as part of the Singapore Airshow. “We shouldn’t pay first without having the infrastructure ready to be operated and used by airlines and by the users.”
Passengers flying out of Changi
Airport may have to pay $10 to $15 extra as part of a new tax being considered to help pay for the hub’s expansion, including the building of T5, the Straits Times reported. Charges for airlines, including parking and landing fees, are expected to rise by about 30 percent, according to the report. Changi is one of the key hubs for international flights in Asia.
IATA’s de Juniac also said that low-cost carriers need traffic growth of
6 percent to 9 percent to fill aircraft to be delivered in the next five to seven years. Air cargo traffic is forecast to rise 4.5 percent this year compared with 9 percent gain in 2017; slower inventory increase will lead to smaller but solid growth for air cargo. China needs more airspace for civil aviation, and to modernise its air-traffic control system for growth.

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