Wanted:
investors for China's Guangzhou airport
Tue May 9, 2006
8:59am ET
HONG KONG
(Reuters) - China's Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport, now pursuing a
$2.16 billion expansion, is considering taking on foreign investors to
help bankroll its rapid growth while beefing up management and service
standards.
Its controlling firm is now pondering
selling up to a maximum allowable 49 percent of the airport to overseas
buyers, joining a small but growing group of Chinese airports that have
either launched discussions with potential investors or are gearing up to
do so.
"We're considering introducing
strategic partners," said Chen Xiaoning, Vice President at Guangzhou
Airport Management Corp., which owns the Guangzhou Baiyun International
Airport. "We will make a decision based on our funding need and our
management needs."
"We do have certain financial
pressures, but what is more important is that we would like to find
partners that could create a win-win situation," Chen said.
Chen said Baiyun airport was still loss
making, like many newly expanded airports around the world, but he hoped
the situation would improve by 2010. He expected 2006 passenger traffic to
grow 15 percent to 27 million passengers and cargo handling volume to rise
19 percent to 0.8 million tonnes.
China's fast-growing air traffic, as its
increasingly wealthy populace takes to the skies, has attracted several
foreign investors. The booming southern city of Guangzhou kicked off its
multi-billion dollar expansion in 2004 to cater to projected future demand
for travel and cargo.
German airport operator Fraport A.G.
agreed to buy a 25 percent stake in Ningbo's Lishe airport last year, and
the company said in February that it was in talks to buy up to 49 percent
of Xian's Xianyang International Airport.
Denmark's Copenhagen Airports took
a 20 percent stake in Hainan's Meiland Airport in 2002, and the Hong Kong
Airport Authority also bought 35 percent of Hangzhou's airport in 2005.
Chen would not identify potential
investors but said Fraport had helped them with staff management and the
exploration of new international routes.
Baiyun airport spent 19.6 billion yuan
building the first phase of a new terminal at Huadu, about 30 kilometers
from Guangzhou, the capital of the affluent southern province of Guangdong,
which borders Hong Kong.
Less than two years after moving to the
new airport, the company has already started construction of its second
phase, which would cost about 17.3 billion Yuan and bring a third runway,
a cargo terminal and other facilities.
The expansion would boost cargo-handling
capacity to nearly 2 million tones a year by 2010, more than tripling the
0.67 million tones it handled in 2005.
Chen said FedEx Corp. would contribute up
to 0.8 million tones of the cargo volume a year when its new China hub
opened in 2008. FedEx plans to move its Asia-Pacific center to China from
the Philippines by building a US$150 million hub in the airport.
Under the expansion plan, the airport's
passenger handling capacity would also rise to 38 million passengers a
year, compared with 23.4 million in 2005. Its Shanghai-listed unit,
Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport , made a net profit of 251 million Yuan
in 2005. The listed arm operates passenger, landing, storage and other
services at the Baiyun airport.
Although there are five major airports in
the Pearl River Delta region including Hong Kong and Macau, Chen said he
would not worry too much about competition.
"The biggest challenge for us will
be ourselves, and that's how we lift management and service
standards," he said. |