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Japan Airlines and All Nippon Airways will slash or suspend flights on nine domestic routes in and out of Kansai International Airport in fiscal 2009, sources said. The airlines will switch their focus to Osaka International Airport, which has higher seat occupancy rates, they said. U.S.-based Northwest Airlines will also suspend flights between Kansai and Detroit and Saipan from March. The second spate of cuts to Kansai airport services follows a round of reductions and suspensions introduced last autumn. Airport revenue is expected to be severely impacted by the scaleback in operations, the sources added. JAL will reduce or suspend flights on five routes to and from Aomori and four cities in Hokkaido, the sources said. ANA will take similar measures on four routes to and from Haneda in Tokyo, Kagoshima, Kochi and Matsuyama.
Behan wrote:Isn't that the airport that is sinking into the bay? Or has the sinking been stopped?
Mock Cockpit wrote:Still a pleasure to use. Always a thrill for me crossing the bridge to that island. Now if the airline industry here can get it's shit together we might actually be able to get some Ryanair style action here. 10000 yen return to Guam? A bloke can dream.
After building an artificial island in Osaka Bay to host a gleaming, new airport in 1994, officials discovered it was sinking into the sea.
More than 20 years later, the high-stakes deal to privatize Kansai International Airport could be at risk of a similar fate, an embarrassing setback in Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s drive to attract investments and cut its massive debt.
The problem: the government agency running the bid refuses to budge on an $18-billion price tag that makes Kansai six times as expensive as a comparable deal in 2013 for airports in Portugal, insiders said.
“The government is trying to recover what it lost in Kansai. That is not going to work,” said Sam Tabuchi, an expert in infrastructure investment at Toyo University.
The sale of the right to operate Kansai and its Renzo Piano-designed terminal represents Japan’s first major attempt to auction the rights for cash-generating infrastructure and accounts for about a fifth of the funding the Abe administration expects to attract over the next decade with such projects.
Abe advisers have touted the Kansai deal, which will be followed by sales of rights to operate smaller airports, highways and water utilities across the country, as crucial for creating a market for infrastructure and building a base of experience for Japanese companies to operate such projects overseas.
But investors balked at the price for the Kansai concession, which includes the rights to the smaller Itami airport nearby. That forced the state-owned company that runs the airport to extend by three months an initial bid deadline initially planned for February.
Officials from both the transport and finance ministries involved in the process said that lowering the price is not an option.
In addition, the current bid terms will shift all of the nearly $10 billion debt run up by Kansai to a private investor. Much of that represents costs incurred when planners discovered in 2000 that landfill under the airport was sinking and needed to be shored up with a massive retaining wall.
In December New Kansai, the company that currently runs the airport, named nine Japanese companies, including Orix Corp., Mitsubishi Corp. and Mitsui Fudosan Co., as qualified bidders.
Foreign qualified bidders include Italian group Atlantia SpA, which controls Fiumicino Airport in Rome and Ferrovial, which has a stake in Heathrow Airport Holdings Ltd.
AMP Capital Investors and IFM Investors, two key investors in Melbourne Airport in Australia, are also on the list of potential bidders, while Citigroup Inc. and SMBC Nikko Securities are advising New Kansai on the deal.
“We are potentially interested in joining a consortium as a provider of subordinated debt,” AMP Capital said in a statement. “We have held discussions with a number of parties and are currently monitoring developments.”
Japanese officials defend the Kansai price based on the growing number of overseas visitors to Japan and the airport’s capacity to add flights and operate around the clock.
Last year Kansai International Airport and Osaka International Airport at Itami attracted 32 million passengers.
But Hiroki Shibata, director at Standard and Poor’s, said Tokyo may need to abandon some debt if it wants to find a buyer and provide some backstop to investors against risks like the disruption from an epidemic or political turmoil.
“Asking private companies to shoulder all of the current debt involves a very heavy burden on their creditworthiness,” he said.
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Abe advisers have touted the Kansai deal, which will be followed by sales of rights to operate smaller airports, highways and water utilities across the country, as crucial for creating a market for infrastructure and building a base of experience for Japanese companies to operate such projects overseas.
Russell wrote:
Dunno what they are smoking. KIX airport has been bleeding money for years, and is located in a very inconvenient place.
To make things worse, there are two good airports nearby: Itami airport at 30 minutes from downtown Osaka and Kobe airport at 20 minutes from downtown Kobe.
inflames wrote:KIX's location is a bit annoying, but at least they managed to get the trains right (not like taking the train to Itami or Kobe airport)..
Cyka UchuuJin wrote:I thought there were plans to build a whole new airport somewhere in the region though?
kurogane wrote:inflames wrote:KIX's location is a bit annoying, but at least they managed to get the trains right (not like taking the train to Itami or Kobe airport)..
Yeah, fair point, especially if you're travelling heavy. I always use Takkyubin and go light, and the savings to either Itami or Kobe are worth the transfers but I could see it being a pain in the ass. I actually enjoy the idea of getting there for 900 yen or less, but fair enough. At least I can now get a grip on how some might want to call KIX Benri!!. Thanks.
inflames wrote:kurogane wrote:inflames wrote:KIX's location is a bit annoying, but at least they managed to get the trains right (not like taking the train to Itami or Kobe airport)..
Yeah, fair point, especially if you're travelling heavy. I always use Takkyubin and go light, and the savings to either Itami or Kobe are worth the transfers but I could see it being a pain in the ass. I actually enjoy the idea of getting there for 900 yen or less, but fair enough. At least I can now get a grip on how some might want to call KIX Benri!!. Thanks.
Getting to Kobe requires either the bus or the port liner, and I really hate the port liner.
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