Commitments for the creation of 850 new jobs have been secured from
two Shannon-based companies, as part of plans for an International
Aviation Services Centre that will see the separation of Shannon Airport
from the Dublin Airport Authority.
The Government has decided to
grant Shannon Airport full independence and merge the airport with a
restructured Shannon Development to form a new, publicly-owned,
commercial entity in 2013.
An independent Shannon Airport combined
with the landbank of Shannon Development could "conservatively"
generate between 3,000 and 3,500 new direct jobs over the next five
years, according to a Government-appointed task force.
This is
separate of construction jobs and would revolve around growing air
traffic at the airport and establishing an international aviation
services centre.
This and other recommendations underpinned the
Cabinet’s decision on Monday to approve the separation of Shannon
Airport from the Dublin Airport Authority (DAA) by the end of this year.
The
reorganisation of Shannon Development is expected to happen by July
2013. This will involve the landbank being merged with the airport into a
new entity.
The Aviation Business Development Task Force, headed
by Bord Gáis chairman Rose Hynes, submitted its report to Government
recently. It said it had obtained "specific commitments" from two
existing companies in Shannon to expand their employment with the
addition of almost 1,000 jobs. It said these jobs were contingent on
Shannon's separation from the DAA.
The task force concluded that
an independent airport combined with the landbank from Shannon
Development could be "successful and sustainable" and "contribute
significantly" to the economic development of the midwest.
Shannon
Airport currently employs 230 staff directly, while an additional 1,600
work in neighbouring aviation-related businesses.
The task force
predicted that the airport could attract up to 2.5 million passengers
annually within three to five years. That compares with the 1.5 million
expected in 2012.
It said the airport had the potential to attract new airline services by offering a competitive and flexible tariff structure.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
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