Showing posts with label Changi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Changi. Show all posts

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Air pockets ahead for Changi


22 March 12  The Straits Times  by Karamjit Kaur

CHANGI'S quest to stay at the top of the world airports league is about to hit some air pockets. And just as a smooth touchdown depends on a match of skill and chemistry between the pilot and the control tower, the key to Changi's continued success will be how well Singapore's aviation regulator and the airport operator fly together.

The challenge for Changi is how to keep up with the rise in passenger numbers and expectations.
Earlier this month, the Transport Ministry set up an 11-member working group helmed by Minister of State Josephine Teo to assess Changi's infrastructure and other requirements in the coming decades. Recommendations will be made within a year.
Plans have meanwhile been unveiled to close down the Budget Terminal in September to make way for a newer, bigger facility slated for opening by 2017.
Until then, life is going to get busier at Terminal 2, which will absorb the budget traveller traffic. The terminal which handled 13 million passengers last year will see the traffic swell overnight to about 18 million.

Still, that is not as bad as it might seem. T2 can take up to 23 million passengers a year. In 2007 - the year before T3 opened - it handled 21.5 million passengers.
What this episode does highlight, though, are concerns about Changi's long-term capacity - the focus of the Transport Ministry's working group.

The Centre for Asia-Pacific Aviation (Capa), an industry think-tank, said recently that if Changi continues to grow its traffic by 8 per cent a year - the average since 2004 - the airport will hit full capacity by the time the new terminal opens.
Singapore needs not one but two new terminals by the end of this decade, Capa said, and a third runway as well, to cope with increasing flights.

The team planning Changi's future has a tough job, for two reasons.
One is the sheer logistics. The next phase of Changi's expansion will go beyond the current airport boundary. There is no space for another terminal on existing airport land.
The next big terminal is likely to be erected next to Runway 3, more familiar as the venue for the biennial Singapore Airshow.
If cleared for take-off, the project will be massive and costly. Not only is there a main road - Changi Coast Road - separating the area from existing airport land, Runway 3 is not connected to the other two runways.

Planners will have to find a way to move aircraft, travellers, bags and cargo between the two locations. This is a formidable, but essentially a design, challenge. Options include flyovers as well as underground links.
The second issue, which might call for even more heavy lifting by the Transport Ministry's panel, is how to reconcile the divergence in the interests of the two stakeholders - the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) and Changi Airport Group (CAG).
In 2009 when CAAS was split into two arms - one to regulate the industry and the other to run the airport - the rationale was to ensure Singapore remained a premier aviation hub.
As a corporate entity, the airport would be more independent and able to react nimbly to increasing competition, the Government said then.
But it would not be focused solely on the bottom line and the assurance to travellers was that the change would not affect the level of service they had come to associate with Changi.
Three years later, aviation insiders say the regulator and the operator do not always see eye to eye.
The ends remain the same - more airlines and flights, and happy travellers - but the means sometimes differ. And this is especially so when it comes to capacity issues.
For more than three decades, Changi's mantra - now that of the CAAS - has been to build ahead of capacity.

When T3 opened in 2008, some travellers described it as a 'ghost town' because it was so empty. Airport retailers were not happy either. Four years later, the terminal is utilising just 57 per cent of its annual passenger handling ability.
Overall, Changi's total traffic takes up 64 per cent of available capacity now.
Travellers don't like crowded terminals. They want room to move around and enough chairs to sit on while waiting for flights.
But even as it is important to please the customer, airport operators are also mindful of the need to ensure the efficient use of assets and resources so they can run viable - and more importantly, profitable - operations.
The question for Changi Airport Group then, is whether it is cost-effective to operate the airport at such low capacity levels, as is the present case, or whether it should pack more people into the terminals.

Other major airport hubs in Hong Kong, South Korea and London reportedly run at more than 80 per cent of total capacity, and are profitable.
The same goes for runways.
Even as calls are being made for Changi to operate a third runway - in line with the 'build ahead of capacity' mentality - an observer with CAG's hat on would point out that while Changi Airport handled 302,000 take-offs and landings last year, Heathrow, which also has two runways, did 476,197.
So instead of rushing to invest in a third runway, perhaps the focus could be on improving efficiency with the current two.

At the end of the day, even if there are some flight delays and terminals become more crowded, would it really hurt Changi's image that much?
The team planning Changi's future will have to tackle the differences between CAAS and CAG when deciding when to build the new terminal and who will pay for it and the related infrastructure works. All these issues will have to be considered carefully, with one eye on the need to ensure the airport's continued success and the other on Changi Airport Group's business interests.
Where the line is drawn will determine the Changi Airport that will greet travellers 10 to 15 years from now.

http://www.singaporeairfreight.com/SingleNews.aspx?DirID=137&rec_code=797131

Saturday, September 17, 2011

<iframe src="https://viewer.zoho.com/https://viewer.zoho.com/docs/urlview.do?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.futureairport.com%2Farticles%2F025_mar2011%2FFAI025_qa-changi.pdf&embed=true" frameborder="0" width="590" height="500"> </iframe>

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Flying straight into the competition

Karamjit Kaur
The Straits Times
Publication Date : 19-08-2011

Australian airline Qantas is looking at either Singapore or Kuala Lumpur as the base for a new premium carrier it plans to launch.
Its decision either way will have an impact not only on rival Singapore Airlines (SIA) and local carriers, but on the hub status of Singapore's Changi Airport.
Qantas' new start-up is among several initiatives to boost business and salvage its loss-making international operations. Chief executive Alan Joyce has not disclosed much about it. What is known is that the new entity will be a separate brand from Qantas' distinctive flying kangaroo, and will kick off with a fleet of 11 single-aisle Airbus 320 aircraft.

Many aviation watchers think Qantas will pick Singapore. But KL's appeal cannot be dismissed either.
In some ways, Singapore is the obvious choice because Qantas and its low-cost arm Jetstar, is already the largest single foreign player at Changi, accounting for about 10.5 per cent of the total number of weekly seats. The SIA group, including regional airline SilkAir, controls 40 per cent of the market.
Singapore is also a key hub for Qantas on the Australia-Britain route. In contrast, Qantas does not fly direct to KL.

Picking Singapore would allow the new Qantas carrier to leverage on Changi Airport's position as a hub for premium and business travellers, and let it tap Changi's network of over 100 airlines operating to more than 200 cities. Kuala Lumpur International Airport is served by about 60 carriers.
But there are also sound arguments in favour of KL being the base of the new carrier. For one thing, it allows Qantas to deepen existing partnerships with AirAsia and full-service carrier Malaysia Airlines (MAS).
In January last year, AirAsia and Jetstar inked a deal to pool resources and expertise in a drive to slash costs and lower ticket prices.

More recently, Qantas sponsored MAS' entry into the Oneworld global aviation alliance, which includes Qantas, British Airways and Cathay Pacific. This allows Qantas, which has a limited presence in Asia, to leverage on MAS' network to expand its own reach.
But business links between the Qantas family and the MAS family do not necessarily mean that the Australian carrier should plant its new flag in KL.
Flying out of KL could be counter-productive as the new entity could take away market share from the local players.

By the same token, a new Qantas arm in Singapore that targets the premium market is going to hurt SIA and its regional carrier SilkAir. Already, SIA's market share and yields have eroded in recent years, in the face of competition from regional budget carriers and improved service from full-service airlines like Emirates and Cathay Pacific. A new Qantas-backed carrier flying out of Singapore will intensify the heat on SIA.
SIA is already preparing for a more competitive skyscape. It plans to launch its own long-haul low-cost carrier by the middle of next year.

It recently struck a deal with Virgin Australia to code-share - sell seats on each other's services - and coordinate flight schedules for seamless transfers.
Whether its preferred choice is Singapore or KL, Qantas will need the official nod from the relevant civil aviation regulator to launch its new carrier.

If Qantas wants to fly its new carrier out of Singapore, the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) must scrutinise what value the new carrier will bring to Singapore.
How will the new carrier enhance Singapore's position as a premier air hub in the region and make Changi more attractive to both airlines and travellers?

Will the new carrier launch new routes and markets? Or is the intention merely to snatch market share away from SIA and other incumbents that fly out of Singapore?
CAAS will have to strike a balance between promoting Changi as an air hub, and safeguarding the interests of existing airlines, including SIA, that fly out of Singapore. Its assessment must be guided ultimately by what is best for the country.

Unlike some other countries reluctant to open their skies to foreign carriers for fear of weakening their own local airlines, the Singapore Government has always adopted a liberal stance.
Having more airlines and linkages out of Singapore makes Changi attractive to travellers, and promotes business links and overall economic growth. The interests of SIA and other local airlines sometimes have to take a back seat to this paramount objective.

This was a position then Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew reiterated when he got involved in a dispute between SIA and its pilots several years ago. He had declared in January 2004 that if budget airlines were to eat into SIA's profits, his reaction would be: "So be it". This was because the more important objective was "our remaining a busy air hub".

This of course does not mean that the Government does not push for SIA's rights and that of other local carriers. When air deals are sealed between countries, these are often the end result of delicate manoeuvring, with one eye on the commercial interests of the country's carrier/s and the other on the wider benefits that increased traffic will bring to that country.

The ideal scenario from Singapore's point of view would be for the Australian carrier to fly out of Singapore in return for SIA getting air rights between Australia and the United States which it has long lobbied for.
But even if no such deal is struck, CAAS should consider an application from Qantas on its own merit. If satisfied that Qantas' new arm will benefit Changi Airport and Singapore's aviation industry, then it must say yes to the kangaroo, even if it hurts Singapore's national airline SIA.

But even that need not be a zero sum game. In fact, one can argue that SIA's success to date is due in part to the airline having to constantly upgrade and improve its services and products to deal with the competition.
To its credit, SIA has risen to the challenge. There is every chance it will do so again, even if Qantas is allowed to plant its new flag at Changi.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

AIP Supplements

AIP Supplement (AIP SUP) publishes temporary changes of long duration (three months and longer) and information of short duration that contains extensive text and/or graphics, supplementing the permanent information contained in AIP Singapore.


http://www.caas.gov.sg/caas/en/Regulations/Aeronautical_Information/AIP_Supplements/index.html

REPUBLIC OF SINGAPORE: AIP

CAAS provides aeronautical information necessary for the safety, regularity and efficiency of international and national air navigation for the entire territory of Singapore and for the airspace over the high seas encompassed by the Singapore Flight Information Region (FIR).

Basic aeronautical information document that contains permanent information essential to air navigation within the Singapore FIR is published in Aeronautical Information Publication (AIP) Singapore and its updates/amendments. AIP Singapore s made up of three parts, namely General (GEN), En-route (ENR) and Aerodromes (AD).

AIP Singapore is updated by a regular amendment service of reprinted pages issued once every two months. 




Ben:


Catogorised here
http://www.caas.gov.sg/caas/en/Regulations/Aeronautical_Information/AIP/?__locale=en

or if you feel like a hero, 600 pages of it here
http://appserver1.caas.gov.sg/UploadedImages/AIPSingapore_5_May_2011.pdf

Sunday, January 23, 2011

CAAS Bridging Skies: NEW DIRECTIONS

The newly established Changi Airport Group (CAG) aims to grow Changi Airport to even greater iconic status in the international aviation arena.

http://www.bridgingskies.com/q&a.php?issue=201003

Friday, January 21, 2011

SINGAPORE, A REGIONAL AEROSPACE HUB

 Since 1990, Singapore’s aerospace industry has grown at
an average yearly rate of 13%, fuelled by the expansion in
the aviation sector in the Asia Pacific region and thanks to
the Singapore government’s aspirations to develop it.
Today, according to EDB’s latest figures, the aerospace industry
employs 19,000 people and generates a turnover of S$7.1 billion.
Equipped with world-class airport infrastructure, excellent connectivity,
a skilled workforce, strong technology base, and a critical
mass of aerospace activities, Singapore is uniquely placed to
serve as a strategic base for aerospace companies to expand
into the Asian markets and beyond.
Not only considered as a hub for passengers and freight, Singapore
gained recognition as aerospace hub. The strong base of
companies offering a full range of MRO (Maintenance, Repair
and Overhaul) services for airframe, key systems and components
of the aircraft, as well as the strong financial, regulatory
and logistics infrastructure here make it suitable for MRO companies
to undertake such services, whether in partnership or on
their own. Singapore currently accounts for 22% of Asia Pacific’s
MRO output.
To assist the expansion of the industry, Singapore government
is developing Seletar Aero+sPace Park, a 140 hectare project
which will cost around S$60m and should be completed in 2018.
Apart from attracting more aerospace manufacturing projects,
Singapore is developing both its Research and Development
(R&D) and training and education capabilities. EADS, Pratt &
Whitney, and GE have found Singapore to be an attractive location
for R&D activities because of the ready availability of talent,
a strong intellectual property regime, a cost competitive
business environment, and a vibrant research framework.

http://www.francemondexpress.fr/IMG/pdf/FCCS_Focus_Winter_09_.pdf

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

CAAS Aviation Development Fund (ADF)

The Aviation Development Fund (ADF) was set up by CAAS with a budget of S$100
million for use over a 5-year period starting from 1 April 2010 to 31 March 2015. It will
support CAAS’ industry development goals through a set of incentives built around the
three thrusts of enabling enterprise, ideas and people. The ADF will also support
broader industry-level initiatives to raise effectiveness and competitiveness.
The ADF will be used to accelerate further development and growth of the aviation
industry in Singapore, and ensure its continued relevance and competitiveness globally.
Any organisation that meets the criteria under the incentive programmes can apply to
benefit from the ADF.
From April 2010, two programmes under the ADF will be launched at the budget of $25
million each - namely the Aviation Partnership Programme and Aviation Innovation
Programme. Interested parties may contact CAAS for details and further discussion
when these two programmes are opened for applications from 1 April 2010.
About Aviation Partnership Programme
Setting aside $25 million for next 5 years for joint initiatives with industry partners to
raise productivity
CAAS will partner the industry to drive the adoption of new industry-level standards or
processes that help to enhance the overall productivity, effectiveness and
competitiveness. For those initiatives jointly identified by CAAS and the industry, CAAS
will extend funding support for the development of the common standards and
platforms, as well as to encourage adoption by individual companies. Details of the
type of industry-level projects being supported through this programme and application
procedures will be announced to interested applicants in due course.
About Aviation Innovation Programme
A 5-year programme to grow niches of excellence through innovation at a budget of $25
million
This programme will assist companies to develop new capabilities in the industry by
encouraging innovation and R&D, building aviation knowledge and research in
Singapore and supporting the introduction of new products to the aviation sector.
Funding support will also be provided to companies to develop new capabilities and
grow niches of excellence. Funding support can include:
• Development of new business concepts, equipment, course offerings
• R&D projects to develop new products or processes
• Test-bedding of new technologies for adoption across aviation sector
• Introduction of new products to aviation sector meeting Technical Standards Orders
(TSO) and other regulatory requirements.

http://appserver1.caas.gov.sg/caasmediaweb2010/opencms/Journalist/Press_Releases/2010/downloads/factsheet_adf.pdf

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Changi Airport unveils a raft of customer service initiatives

Published: 28/09/10
Source: ©The Moodie Report
By Mary Jane Pittilla, Brands Editor




http://www.moodiereport.com/document.php?c_id=1178&doc_id=25373

FACT SHEETS ON CHANGI AIRPORT’S CUSTOMER CENTRIC INITIATIVES

included are:

Initiatives 
1. SWIFT – Service Workforce Instant Feedback Transformation
2. VOTES – Valuing Our Tenants’ Excellent Service
3. Workforce Survey
4. New Tourist Refund Scheme
5. iChangi (mobile application and interactive kiosk)
6. Care@Changi
7. CHANGI Identity
8. Speedpost@Changi
9. Fast Tray Return System
10. Workforce Skills Qualifications and Service Literacy Test
11. Passenger Reconciliation System
12. Taxi Management System and Carpark Information System


http://www.airports.org/aci/ACIAPAC/File/News%20Release%20Docs/News_Members/The%20Changi%20Experience%20Fact%20Sheet.pdf

Friday, November 26, 2010

Coolport @ Changi



 On-airport facility dedicated to handling perishable cargo opens



 


SINGAPORE : Singapore has opened the first on-airport facility in Asia dedicated to handling perishable cargo.

The facility, built at a cost of S$16.5 million, is owned by gateway services and food-solutions provider SATS.

Thanks to its ability to better process and forward perishable cargo such as fresh produce and pharmaceuticals, Coolport is expected to create new trade flows through Singapore.

The facility is currently about 60 per cent utilised, and is expected to reach full capacity in two years.

SATS is currently in discussions with customers that could see utilisation reach 80 per cent by mid-2011.

Packing fresh-cut flowers for redistribution is one of the valued-added services that is offered at Coolport.

It is now possible because temperatures are controlled throughout the warehouse, which - depending on the produce - can be as low as minus 28 degrees celsius.

This means products are kept at desired temperatures virtually from the moment they are offloaded from the plane, and through various stages of handling. SATS previously handled perishable cargo in 17 cold rooms located across four warehouses. A dedicated facility allows the processing of fresh produce and other cargo for onward shipment, either by air or sea.

Clement Woon, president and CEO of SATS, said: "In the old way, you actually have to take it off the airport, repack it so that it can go into this small little chiller...It is not really efficient and a lot of working spaces are at an ambient temperature and our ambient temperature is at 30 degrees or so. Now the ambient temperature is at 6 to 10 degrees.

"Maybe about 20 per cent to 30 per cent of food never reaches the table because it is destroyed along the cold chain. (We are) hoping that by putting this thing together, we will be able to reduce the amount that will be destroyed in the logistics process."

Coolport's operator SATS said it had refurbished one of its warehouses to build the facility.

This was in order to tap growth opportunities in the perishable-goods segment, amidst declining volumes in general cargo.

SATS said perishable cargo makes up about 10 per cent of worldwide air cargo, and is expected to grow by up to 8 per cent every year.

Mr Woon said: "Unfortunately over the last few years, cargo in Singapore has come down, so we actually take the opportunity to reconfigure this terminal into a perishable handling unit. So that helps to actually bring back some of the capacity, and optimise the other areas."

The facility comes online just months after the opening of Freeport in May, a similar facility at Changi Airport that specialises in the storage of valuable art and assets.

Lim Hwee Hua, Second Minister for Finance and Transport, and Minister in the Prime Minister's Office, said: "These new innovative on-airport facilities will allow our valued partners in the airlines and air freight industries to develop more comprehensive and differentiated business solutions that target new market segments, as well as to tap on the rapid growth of Asia.

"The growth of Asia as a key healthcare market has also resulted in greater requirement for stringent control in the distribution of healthcare products. With these changing demand patterns and new requirements, reliable cold chain facilities and perishables handling centres are becoming increasingly important."

While SATS expects the new facility to have a positive impact on its bottomline, it declined to speculate on a figure.

Mr Woon said: "This will be incremental. We are realigning our resources into our central facility; that will give us the capabilities as we work on the new accounts that will let us go up to 80 per cent.

"We will be able to then take that incremental into the bottom line. I will not say how much it is at the present moment, but certainly, it will be a positive impact when we actually have reached that capacity level that we have planned."

Coolport has about 8,000 square metres of space, and can be expanded through conversion to 14,000 square metres. It will be able to handle 250,000 tonnes of cargo a year, for a start.

- CNA/ms


http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporebusinessnews/view/1095753/1/.html

Friday, November 19, 2010

Singapore Changi Airport (ICAO: WSSS, IATA: SIN) Charts and maps

  • Google Map
  • Standard Dep Chart
  • Standard Arr Chart
  • Standard Approach Chart 
  • Instrument Approach Chart  
also includes, Google map of

  • Waypoints near WSSS
  • Nav Aids near WSSS
http://www.opennav.com/airport/WSSS

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Case Study: Singapore Changi Airport, Terminal 1 Upgrading, Singapore


22 July 2010

Brintons has enjoyed a long and successful relationship with Changi Airport Group for more than 20 years and when the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) announced in 2008 that it would upgrade Changi T1 at an estimated cost of $500 million, Brintons’ reputation for handling and delivering complex, large-scale projects on time and within budget meant it was commissioned to supply the 54,000 sq metres of carpet that were required for the renovation project....


http://www.designbuild-network.com/contractors/interior/brintons/press10.html

http://www.moodiereport.com/document.php?c_id=1178&doc_id=18418

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Changi ground handling scene set for shake-up



SIX years ago, Changi Airport took a big step to liberalise its ground-handling market and awarded a new licence for the first time in almost three decades, to global giant Swissport.
It seemed a good move. Passenger, baggage and cargo handling rates fell as did charges for ramp handling which includes parking and towing as well as cleaning of aircraft. This made airlines happy and the airport more competitive. On the surface, the exercise had met its objectives.
But Swissport was bleeding and after four years of operations, called it quits in April last year, having suffered losses of more than $50 million.
Despite the failed attempt, Changi is at it again and intends to have another new player in the business next year, joining incumbents Singapore Airport Terminal Services (Sats) and Changi International Airport Services (CIAS).
Four parties - low-cost carriers Jetstar and AirAsia, Australia's Aero-Care and SIA Engineering - have already expressed interest in the proposal, undeterred by the failure of heavyweight Swissport.
They know that whoever bags the job this time will have a better chance of success in a new competitive landscape, driven by recent developments in the local aviation scene.
With a presence at 178 airports in 38 countries, Swissport is no small fry; yet it managed to secure just four airline customers in its four years here.
A key reason was the common practice of reciprocity, where a carrier with its own ground-handling operation agrees to use another airline's in return for a reciprocal arrangement elsewhere.
With Sats a subsidiary of Singapore Airlines (SIA), there was little hope for Swissport and indeed CIAS to chip away at its 80 per cent share of Changi's ground-handling business. To defend its turf, Sats also reportedly cut rates and renegotiated contracts with airline customers, locking them in for three to five years.
That was then. Today Sats stands alone, separated from SIA after a split last year. The rift was further deepened when Sats declared a few months ago that it was also breaking up with SIA's aircraft maintenance arm SIA Engineering, after obtaining its own ramp-handling licence.
Before, the two were ground-handling partners, with Sats taking care of catering and passenger, baggage and cargo handling while SIA Engineering took charge of ramp handling, including aircraft parking, towing and cleaning.
The big divorce presents opportunities, which Swissport did not have, for CIAS and the new ground handler, to move in on Sats' existing customer base.
Sats must be feeling the heat because it has, in the last 18 months or so, made strategic moves to reduce its reliance on the aviation industry by growing its food arm, most notably with the acquisition of food manufacturer and distributor, Singapore Food Industries.
The Sats factor aside, it is the recent boom in low-cost travel out of Changi Airport that the new ground handler will be able to cash in on.
In its specifications to interested parties, Changi Airport Group made clear that the ongoing hunt is for a firm that has operated in an environment 'with a mix of full-service air carriers and a growing base of low-cost air carriers'. It added that the ground handler should have implemented innovative products and service solutions, in particular to serve the needs of such carriers.
Handling machines and other tools of the trade may be similar but budget airlines often have different operational needs from the likes of SIA.
For instance, a no-frills carrier which sells food and drinks on board instead of offering meals as part of the air fare, may want an option that allows them to return to the ground handler food that is not sold. Also, they are less hung up on performance indicators like how fast a bag appears on the belt after a plane lands.
It is interesting to note that of the four firms in the running for the new licence, two are low-cost carriers and one already services such carriers in Australia.
Given the rate at which budget airlines have expanded their business at Changi, having a hold on this segment of the business would lock in significant market share for the chosen ground handler.
In just under six years, the number of low-cost flights in and out of Changi Airport has jumped by about 90 per cent, contributing to the boom in regional air traffic. Between 2004 and last year, passenger numbers between Singapore and the region grew by almost 40 per cent, outstripping overall growth.
Jetstar Asia, AirAsia and Tiger Airways - the three main low-cost carriers at Changi Airport - now operate a total of more than 1,200 to-and-fro flights a week, about 24 per cent of the airport's total.
When Jetstar's Australia-based boss Bruce Buchanan was in town several months ago, he told reporters that Jetstar and AirAsia, which recently formed an alliance to pool expertise and resources, have agreed that if either of them gets the ground-handling licence, the airline will also be assured of the other carrier's business.
An even bigger prize potentially is Qantas, which owns Jetstar Airways in Australia and 49 per cent of the Singapore-based arm, Jetstar Asia. Qantas is the second-biggest carrier operating at Changi Airport, after SIA.
With fresh opportunities and a new aviation landscape, Changi Airport's second attempt at opening up the ground-handling market looks set to give the industry a good shake-up.


~ The Straits Times, 12/07/10

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Rivals snap up Changi Airport staff

http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking+News/Singapore/Story/STIStory_265724.html

Singapore Changi embarks on its 21st century makeover

http://www.centreforaviation.com/news/2008/03/07/singapore-changi-embarks-on-its-21st-century-makeover/


Key Points:

  • Changi’s Budget Airport to be upgraded, plans for a fourth terminal and further upgrade of Terminal One and corporatisation for CAAS proceeding (slowly);
  • Part of a process of re-engineering for the new global environment;
  • Threats not only from major hubs, but also from LCC expansion at KLIA;
  • Conservative attitudes mean that corporatisation comes slowly

Enhancing Our Air Hub Status

http://app.mot.gov.sg/data/s_08_03_06a.htm



SPEECH BY MRS LIM HWEE HUA,
 MINISTER OF STATE FOR FINANCE AND TRANSPORT,
ON AIR TRANSPORT
 AT THE COMMITTEE OF SUPPLY DEBATE,
 ON 6 MARCH 2008
 
talking about:
-         continue to push for the liberalisation of the aviation regime 
-         build capacity to keep ahead of growing demands, and  
-         measures to encourage airlines to come to Singapore and to keep those that are already here 

CAAS to be corporatised to help it stay ahead

http://news.asiaone.com/News/The%2BStraits%2BTimes/Story/CAAS%2Bto%2Bbe%2Bcorporatised%2Bto%2Bhelp%2Bit%2Bstay%2Bahead.html

CORPORATISATION OF CHANGI AIRPORT AND RESTRUCTURING OF CAAS - CORPORATISATION MODEL ANNOUNCED

http://app.mot.gov.sg/data/Corporatisation%20news%20release.pdf


Excerpt:
.....Details of the corporatisation model were announced by the Ministry of Transport (MOT) today. The corporatisation process comprised three main areas of focus. These are: role allocation of the nonregulatory functions of CAAS under a new airport company which will undertake the operational functions of managing Changi Airport, running its emergency services and operations and investments in foreign airports. Strategic and regulatory functions such as air traffic services, air services  negotiations, safety, service and economic regulation will be retained under the restructured Statutory Board. Corporatisation also requires the establishment of a new regulatory framework for competitive aeronautical pricing, service excellence and timely and adequate investments in capacity. Processes have been worked out to ensure successful transition management of human resources and
operational continuity of Changi.
....

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

News article on Changi Terminal 4

News article on Changi Terminal 4
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/333301/1/.html