JUST IN: Uncertainty surrounds re-opening of airports
….FAAN mulls new domestic terminal along Agege Motor Way
Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) said on Thursday that it could not confirm the new date for re-opening of airports as every preparation to restart domestic flights will be subject to the approval of the Presidential Task Force on COVID -19.
Its Director General, Captain Musa Nuhu who disclosed this as a webinar said the regulator was working close with the PTF whose task it will be to unveil the new date.
Speaking through the Director, Consumer Protection Directorate, Abdullahi Usman the NCAA, said it was working with airlines, the airport authority and other players in the sector to ascertain their level of compliance with the protocols designed for restart of domestic flights, but it would need approval from the PTF to unveil the new date.
He said: “We cannot confirm the new date for resumption of flight. The earlier date given was not sacrosanct. We need to get back to the Presidential Task Force on COVID -19 to affirm any new date. We are awaiting further instructions to be guided . The PTF will decide when domestic flights will resume after it may have lifted the restriction on inter state movement.”
Yadudu said as much as the authority has redesigned new operational procedures for restart of domestic flights, it was , however burdened with capacity challenges; which has forced new thinking , as it plans to construct a new domestic terminal along the Agege Motor Way of the metropolis.
The proposed terminal he said was to address capacity constraints of the apron and other operational areas of the two existing terminals of the Lagos Airport.
Yadudu said FAAN plans to carry out a test run of the redesigned system to enable it close existing gaps before domestic flights resume.
He said FAAN was increasingly getting worried over capacity constraints at the Lagos Airport and will initiate a meeting among operators and the regulator on the best operating procedures to adopt before resumption of flights. (The Nation)