By Adam Ihucha
The
upgrade of Tanzania's second largest airport, Kilimanjaro International
Airport, is underway. It is expected to give KIA the capacity to handle
more aircraft and passengers.
The makeover, which started last week, will see all runways, apron, taxiways and passenger lounges modernised.
Project engineer
Mathew Ndossi said that the $39.7 million expansion works, set to be
completed in May 2017, will enable the airport to handle 1.2 million
passengers, up from 600,000 passengers per annum.
The government has
awarded BAM International of Netherlands the contract to overhaul the
facility, financed jointly by Tanzania and the Netherlands government.
KIA will have additional aprons for five aircraft and a new parallel
taxiway to the west for outbound aircraft.
"The aprons'
capacity will almost double as they will be able to accommodate 11 major
aircraft, up from the current six at a go," Mr Ndossi told The
EastAfrican.
The scope of work
comprises the refurbishment of the terminal building (built in 1971),
the construction of a new parallel taxiway, the extension of the
existing apron and taxiways, including repairs on the runway, as well as
the drainage and sewage works.
BAM will also install new airfield ground lighting and floodlights along the apron.
KIA is one of four
international airports in Tanzania, and is the second largest airfield
after Julius Nyerere International Airport in Dar es Salaam. The other
two are Mwanza and Songwe in Mbeya.
The airport has
been handling nearly 80 per cent of the tourists visiting Tanzania
annually, making it a key gateway to the Northern Circuit.
"The idea behind
this project is to stimulate air traffic via KIA," said the managing
director of Kilimanjaro Airports Development Company (Kadco), Bakari
Murusuri.
It is expected that
the project will not only contribute to strengthening of the tourism
sector in northern Tanzania, but will also spur economic and
infrastructure development.
Mr Murusuri said
that since 2010, Kadco had been running promotions overseas, seeking to
attract major global airlines to operate from KIA.
The 44-year-old
airport, located between the Arusha and Kilimanjaro regions, handled a
total of 802,731 passengers in 2014, of which 45 per cent were
international, 38 per cent domestic and 17 per cent transit.
Mr Murusuri said that they expect to handle between 800,000 and 900,000 passengers by the end of this year.
"We expect slightly
less growth compared with recent years, largely driven by a slowdown in
local demand in the run-up to the presidential elections in October and
the Ebola scare among international travellers," he said.
The majority of
passengers using KIA are leisure passengers. Latest official statistics
show that KIA's top five international visitor markets from outside of
Africa are the US (23 per cent), the UK and Germany (8 per cent) each,
Canada (4 per cent) and the Netherlands (3 per cent).
Tanzania
Association of Tour Operators CEO, Sirili Akko applauded the facelift
but said that Kadco should also develop other tourism-related
infrastructure and recreation facilities to attract overseas tourists.
Already, Kadco has
developed a comprehensive plan that will see the 110 sq km estates
surrounding the airport transformed into a modern duty-free shopping
city.
Apart from the air
terminal, the KIA area, strategically placed at the meeting point of the
Northern Zone regions of Arusha, Kilimanjaro and Manyara, has for many
years remained unoccupied.
According to the
master plan, the location is to become a "city" located between Moshi
and Arusha, where prospective investors were to establish huge shopping
centres, high class tourist hotels, duty free ports, export processing
zone, educational institutions, custom bonded warehouses, Curio shops,
golf courses and a large game ranch.





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