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Changi, Tata in airport
venture
Business Standard
February 22, 2007
After an aborted tie-up with the Bharti group
last year, Singapores Changi Airport International
(CAI) is floating a joint venture company with Tata
Realty & Infrastructure, a subsidiary of the Tata
group, to pursue airport modernisation projects in India.
The two partners have signed a memorandum of understanding
(MoU) to set a joint venture company in which Tata Realty
will hold a majority 51 per cent stake and CAI 49 per
cent, to invest in, develop and manage Indian airports.
The scope of the venture could include bidding for
the impending modernisation and operations of the Chennai
and Kolkata airports, Indias third and fifth busiest
airports respectively, which the government wants to
develop as alternative hubs to Mumbai and Delhi.
The venture could also extend to investments in some
of the 35 smaller airports, as well as the proposed
Rs 4,235-crore Navi Mumbai airport project.
Though confirming the development, Dinesh Chandiok,
chief executive officer, Tata Realty & Infrastructure,
declined to give details, saying, As and when
we finalise details, we will announce them.
Chow Kok Fong, chief executive officer of CAI, said,
When we decided that we wanted to make a serious
bid for these projects, it was clear to us that we needed
a partner with an organisational culture and business
values to which we can easily relate. Tata fulfills
all these.
Sources say the Tatas had been approached for a foray
into airport modernisation by many other suitors, including
British Airport Authority, which runs Heathrow airport.
For the Tatas, this is the second recent foray in aviation,
the first being an abortive tie-up with Singapore Airlines
to bid for Air-India, when it was proposed to be privatised.
It holds equity in budget carrier SpiceJet.
CAI, which is wholly owned by the Civil Aviation Authority
of Singapore, had earlier teamed up with telecom giant
Bharti for the Mumbai airport modernisation project
but later pulled out citing lack of confidence in meeting
tender conditions.
Besides the Tata group, CAI is exploring the option
of teaming up with hotel major Leela Group to develop
Kannur airport in north Kerala.
While Changi runs the Singapore airport, experts say
it has limited experience in running airports in other
parts of the globe.
Also, Singapore government-owned companies in the aviation
space have had a patchy record in India.
Apart from the aborted Singapore Airlines-Tata group
tie-up, a proposed ground-handling joint venture involving
Singapore Technology Engineering and Singapore Airport
Terminal Services and Indian Airlines also came to nothing.
Regarding Chennai and Kolkata airports, the government
is expected to make a formal announcement of a privatisation
programme. Chennai handled 6.77 million passengers and
Kolkata 4.4 million in 2006.
The Navi Mumbai airport is expected to absorb 10 million
passengers a year in 2013, its first year of operation,
and 40 million passengers a year by 2030.
Though it had withdrawn from the Mumbai airport project,
CAI has teamed up with GVK Group, the present developers
of the Mumbai airport, to implement a 100-day improvement
programme and assist them in reviewing their master
plan.

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