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Agra may get international airport

Vishal Sharma / New Delhi/Agra February 22, 2006



With Agra seeing a record number of international flights this winter, the
need for an airport of international status is being increasingly felt.

According to the latest proposal being prepared by the Agra administration,
the airport will require at least 1,700 acres of land for the construction
of a minimum of two intersecting air strips and a terminal building of
international standards having enough room to accommodate transit lounges,
duty-free shops, customs houses, and passenger traffic.

The proposed Agra international airport will be independent of the control
of the Indian Air Force that presently governs entries and exits to the
domestic airport located deep inside the Agra Air Force base, sharing air
strips with the Air Force.

The UP chief minister had announced the government's plans to construct an
international airport in Agra. Soon afterwards, Agra District Magistrate
Sanjay Prasad had sent a detailed report highlighting the fact that the new
airport could be constructed by sharing the existing infrastructure
including landing-takeoff-parking facilities with the Agra Air Force base
and that the terminal building could be constructed just outside the base.

However, the project was rejected at the very outset as it was found that
the construction of a terminal building away from the landing strip could
create many practical problems.

After the initial project was rejected, state government officials held a
meeting with the Airports Authority of India and other concerned officials
from the Ministry of Civil Aviation in Agra on 16th December, 2005.

In the meeting, it was decided that the construction of the airport,
including the air-strips and terminal building would be done by the private
sector, strictly on a build-operate-transfer agreement at a fresh piece of
land thatwould be located close to the Agra-Delhi highway.

During the meeting, AAI officials had asked for proposals from the state
government for the land it was offering for the construction of the airport,
to enable it to conduct a feasibility study on that location.

Accordingly, Ashok Kumar, divisional commissioner, Agra asked the district
magistrates of both Agra and Mathura districts to prepare fresh project
reports for the airport, with atleast 1,700 acres of land that was located
outside the urban areas.

But the proposal for the new airport has already begun seeing opposition
from the aviation industry, which is pointing out the apparent
 "wastefulness" of constructing another international airport so close to
the existing international airport at Delhi.

According to sources, only a few years back the Airport Authority of India
had spent several crores on the upgrade and extension of available
facilities at the domestic airport in Agra, which did not see more than a
couple of flights a day, for most of the year.

Now the construction of another airport, of international standards, was not
prudent unless the airport offered parking and hanger facility to the
private airlines, which could serve to ease off the space-crunch from the
airport at Delhi, while increasing the in and outbound traffic on the new
airport at Agra.

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The same old story in the making? Tourist capital, civil enclave, military
control, slots restricted for training flights, no expansion allowed, only
option is to shift to a greenfield site with private money, opposition from
many quarters, delays, delays, delays, eventually the civil enclave will be
closed and converted into a super civil enclave (for VVIPs) etc etc.

How about changing this tired old formula and asking the MILITARY to shift
to a remote location  without compromising security angles? It would be much
cheaper and quicker and would help the country's economic development and
growth with minimum delay and disruption! And all would salute the military
with vigour for their enlightened attitude and great sacrifice Cheers.

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