International airlines are refusing to fly to an alternative hub when
the only airport serving Nigeria’s capital shuts down, forcing
travellers to make lengthy detours at extra cost.
Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja closes completely for
runway repairs on March 8. Domestic and international flights will be
diverted to Kaduna, 170 kilometres (105 miles) away.
Nigeria’s aviation ministry has said the planned six weeks of
resurfacing work were needed because the runway, which was built in 1982
with a 20-year lifespan, was “dilapidated” and “unsafe”.
There have been several reports that potholes have damaged aircraft, prompting one international carrier to cancel its flights on the route.
But Lufthansa, Air France and South African Airways have all said
they will not re-route their flights to Abuja from Frankfurt, Paris and
Johannesburg, to Kaduna or elsewhere in Nigeria.
British Airways and Turkish Airlines have not made a decision but
look likely to follow suit, as both have suspended ticket sales for
Abuja flights during the closure.
Malte Liewerscheidt, senior Africa analyst with the Verisk Maplecroft
global risk consultancy, said the closure of the capital’s airport was
“highly symbolic”.
Nigeria — Africa’s most populous nation — is in recession and
desperate to turn around sky-high inflation and a weak currency that
have deterred overseas investors.
“You have a government that doesn’t even keep the airport to its capital open. What does that say?” he told AFP.
“This raises a whole lot of questions for investors about the assets of the Nigerian government.”
No alternative
Kaduna airport manager Amina Ozi Salami maintained the runway was “100 percent better” than in Abuja. But the state of the runway was not the issue, according to analysts.
Kaduna airport manager Amina Ozi Salami maintained the runway was “100 percent better” than in Abuja. But the state of the runway was not the issue, according to analysts.
Gillian Parker, Nigeria analyst at the Control Risks consultancy,
said the refusal to re-route showed that major international airlines do
not see Kaduna as a “credible alternative”.
Salami said work on the terminal building, which was abandoned in May
2015, had restarted and would be completed — if the contractor was paid
— by early next month.
At the same time, more space was being prepared for storing aviation
fuel while the state government was working to improve street lighting
on the airport road from the city, she added.
Round-the-clock security has been promised, as well as bus shuttle
services to the railway station, from where trains run to the capital
twice a day.
“Staff at Abuja airport will be deployed to Kaduna, so all hands are
on deck to deliver on services,” said Salami, accusing those against the
plan of “playing politics”.
Questions remain about whether Kaduna will cope with the increase in
domestic flights onto which long-haul passengers will have to transfer
after arriving in Lagos and Port Harcourt in the south.
“Cancellations and delays associated with domestic airlines,
currently starved of funds, are unlikely to abate during this period,”
said Control Risks’ Parker.
“Kaduna airport, in its current state, is poorly equipped and
operates without automated services and is likely to struggle with
additional traffic.”
No figures are available about how much money Abuja stands to lose by having its airport out of action for at least six weeks.
But the president of the Abuja Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Tony
Ejinkeonye, said everyone associated with the facility would be “highly
affected”.
Airlines are the only viable option for relatively speedy travel
around Nigeria, as road infrastructure is lacking and security
questionable.
Motorists on the Abuja to Kaduna road have been the target of
kidnappers while Kaduna state has seen a spate of violent ethnic and
sectarian clashes in recent months.
Some travellers could be deterred even with the government’s pledge
of extra security on the road. More security checkpoints will add more
time onto journeys.
One car hire operator in Abuja said travel to Kaduna costs between 25,000 and 30,000 naira ($79-95, 74-89 euros) for a four-wheel drive, and 20,000 to 25,000 naira for an ordinary car.
But prices will likely rise during the closure, the operator added.
The Nigerian Railway Corporation has already increased fares on its
Kaduna-Abuja route by 25 percent.
Passengers now pay 1,050 naira for a standard ticket and 1,500 for an executive seat, leading to charges of profiteering.