The airport industry briefing

The latest news, views and numbers you need to know this month

News in Numbers

136,000

$393m

$1.2bn

46%

30,000

Projects

Retirement for largest air fire extinguisher

Global SuperTanker Service, the group that owns the world’s largest aerial fire extinguisher, was grounded after investors pulled the plug. The US-based Boeing 747 SuperTanker could drop 19.200 gallons of fire retardant or water in just six seconds, and has fought fires all over the world, including in Israel, Chile and Mexico.

Source: Airways Mag

Top contract for Siemens

Siemens Logistics has won a contract for the large-scale expansion of the baggage handling system at South Korea’s Incheon Airport. The agreement, to totally revamp the baggage system at Terminal 2, is set to allow 6,000 extra storage spaces for passengers to check-in early.

Source: Air International

Germany to get first cargo ‘droneports’

DRONAMICS has added three German airports to their network of drone cargo ports. Paderborn-Lippstadt, Rostock–Laage and Airport Weeze will soon be home to same-day unmanned cargo drone flights. Each ‘Black Swan’ drone has a capacity of 350kg and a range of up to 2,500km, making it 80% cheaper than traditional air cargo.

Source: Air International

Quotes

Airport Operators Association chief executive Karen Dee, commenting on their 2021 Scottish election manifesto, hopes a new government will get the air industry back on in the air:

“The pandemic has had a devastating impact on aviation. A new Scottish Government will have to get an aviation recovery started from its first day in office to return Scotland’s airports to the success story they were previously. Aviation brings social and economic benefits to everyone, not just to those employed in aviation and tourism. Many businesses rely on aviation to reach customers and export products while aviation connectivity brings people together, particularly across Highland & Island communities.”

Andreas Pötzsch, managing director of DFS Aviation Services, comments on the future of air traffic control, after DFS released cloud-based air situation display system PHOENIX WebInnovation:

“Air traffic control, along with its infrastructure, is a highly safety-critical industry. We ourselves are an air navigation services provider and we also develop and sell international air traffic control systems. Therefore, we have the same high requirements for our systems and infrastructure as the rest of the aviation industry. We are convinced that cloud technology today has advanced so far that it is able to reliably fulfil these high safety and performance criteria.”

Go to article: Home | Airports are turning to robots to help lighten the loadGo to article: In this issueGo to article: ContentsGo to article: Air Traffic Solutions Company InsightGo to article: Air Traffic SolutionsGo to article: BriefingGo to article: Industry newsGo to article: Airport industry briefingGo to article: Covid-19 executive briefing by GlobalDataGo to article: Aruba Airport AuthorityGo to article: CommentGo to article: Aeroporti di Roma’s pathway to successGo to article: Outbound air travel may not recover for yearsGo to article: Airport fee reduction could help to revive tourismGo to article: Manston Airport: Will plans for Britain’s new global freight hub take off?Go to article: Q&A: Flying animals back to their habitat with Qatar AirwaysGo to article: In DepthGo to article: Airport Covid-19 relief measuresGo to article: Fraport Greece rejuvenation: a catalyst for tourism Go to article: Robot workforce: Airports are developing robot workers to tirelessly serve passengersGo to article: Can Swissport find the right road to recovery?Go to article: EventsGo to article: Global markets and indicesGo to article:  Macro-economic indicatorsGo to article: Macro-economic indicators (page 2)Go to article: Next issue