Title: Approaches to the privatisation of airports
1Approaches to the privatisation of airports
April 21, 2009 Dr. Romano Pagliari Senior
Lecturer Cranfield University
2Why privatise airports ?
- Government needs to raise capital to finance
public spending - Government unable to finance capacity expansion
- To improve efficiency / financial performance of
airports - To improve quality of service to passengers and
airlines
3Short history of privatisation
- 1940s to late 1960s pre-corporate era
- 1970s to late 1980s corporatisation of airports
rise of the state-owned airport authority - First privatisation BAA in 1987
- Since 1990s airport privatisation in other
European countries, Australasia, South America - No privatisation in USA
- Most major airport companies today are still
government-owned
4What are the benefits of privatisation ?
- Focus on customer service
- Increased creativity in
- Marketing to airlines
- Development of commercial (non-aviation) revenues
- Focus on cost efficiency and improving
productivity - Cost-effective investment
5What are the risks of privatisation ?
- Reduction in quality of service to passengers and
airlines. - Large increase in aeronautical charges to
airlines. - The privatised airport will not invest to expand
capacity. - Over-investment in airport capacity followed by
higher charges to airlines gold-plating. - Economic regulation of privatised airport can
deal with the risks.
6Methods of privatisation
Trade sale
Stock market floatation
Management Contract
Project Finance BOOT
Concession
7Methods of privatisationstock market
- All or a of shares sold on stock market
- Management able to retain more control
investors are small and generally passive. - Employees can buy shares stock options for
management - Management may be too concerned with
share price - Stock markets are volatile
- Only BAA has done 100 flotation (de-listed in
2006) - Others (e.g. Copenhagen, Vienna, ADP, Fraport)
have been partial
8Methods of privatisationtrade sale
- All or of shares sold to a single / group of
investors - Sale usually through public tender leads to
higher prices - Investors have experience
- Some shares could be retained by government to
protect public interest - Trade sales common in Europe, Australia, New
Zealand - High prices
9Methods of privatisationconcession
- Private company has a concession to operate the
airport for a fixed period (30-50 years) - Private company pays the government a charge
- Private company has service level agreement with
government (capital investment obligations) - Very popular form of privatisation in Central
South America. - No need for separate economic regulation
included in the contract - Bureaucracy / higher administration costs
10Methods of privatisationothers
- Management contract
- Private company responsible for day to day
management - State retains responsibility for capital
investment and aeronautical charges - Used in high risk regions
- Project Finance (BOOT)
- Build Own Operate Transfer
- Used for new infrastructure (terminals)
- Similar to concession model
11Privatisation of airport networks
- Choice is to sell as one network or to separate
the airports and sell individually or in groups - Advantages of network privatisation
- New private owners take responsibility for small
loss-making airports as well. - Lower administration / transaction costs to the
state. - Advantages of separating airports
- Lack of diversity / competition between airports
- New private owners may neglect management of
small airports
12Privatisation of airport networksMexico
- Privatisation of Mexican airports using
concession model (1998-2000) - Airports split into 3 regional groups each
group formed around one large airport - State retains share in each group
- Group pays of revenue to the state
- Each group must have Mexican investor foreign
investor (AENA, AdP, Copenhagen) - Mexico City Airport remains state-owned
- All very small airports under government
ownership
13Privatisation of airport networksAustralia
- Australian Government privatises government-owned
airports 1998-2002 - Government received very good prices for selling
the airports (17 times EBITDA) - Major airports were separated and sold
individually to investors (trade sale) - 3 phases (Sydney in 2002)
- Foreign ownership restricted to 49
- No government share holding
- Economic regulation
14Privatisation of airport networksArgentina
- Argentina decided to privatise all its 33
airports as one network in 1998 under concession
contract - No corporatisation prior to privatisation
- Annual concession fee to be paid to Government
based on winning bid - Concession fee AR118 million and profits of
the group AR140 million - 2001 economic crisis and problems with concession
contract
15UK experience of privatisation
Central / regional government
Local Council
Government-owned BAA
Private
16UK experience of privatisation
- UK Airports Act 1986
- Privatisation of BAA - BAA sold as 1 company
- All major local council airports to be
established as commercial enterprises - Price-cap economic regulation of 4 airports (3
BAA and Manchester) - Local council airports cannot borrow capital to
finance expansion - Government policy pro-liberalisation /
anti-central planning - Airports must be free to make commercial
decisions themselves
17UK experience of privatisation
- 2003 - Need for national airport strategy to deal
with lack of airport capacity - BAA has become very commercial since
privatisation revenue diversification - Concern that BAA has neglected investment and
service levels - UK Competition Commission enquiry - BAA will have
to sell 2 airports in London and 1 in Scotland
(decision of March 2009) - Regional airports have performed very well since
privatisation all have become very profitable
competitive market - Manchester airport is the only airport to have
remained under local council ownership
18Do you need economic regulation?
- Traditional view is that all airports should be
regulated. - Are airports monopolies and will they take
advantage of their market power to increase
charges to airlines? - Airports with little traffic and spare capacity
less likely to take advantage of airlines. - Airports compete with
- Other airports in the region /country.
- Other airports across the world.
- Possible abuse of market power more likely at
large hub airports with limited capacity.
19Do you need economic regulation?
- Proposed EU Directive on airport charges has
provisions for independent economic regulation - What type of economic regulation should be
applied to privatised airports? - Does the airport possess market power and is it
likely to abuse it? - Forms of economic regulation are
- Ministerial approval
- Price cap
- Rate of return
- Reserve power / prices surveillance
20Do you need economic regulation?
- UK has used price-cap regulation (3 airports)
- Price cap has been criticised
- too bureaucratic
- Under-investment
- UK will move toward license-based regulation -
type of regulation depends on degree of airport
market power - Australia replaced price cap regulation with
reserve power / prices surveillance
21Who buys airports?
- Other airports
- Fraport, Schiphol, Aeroports de Paris
- Transport infrastructure companies
- Ferrovial (BAA)
- Abertis (Luton)
- Airport Investment Funds
- Macquarie (Rome, Sydney, Brussels, Copenhagen)
- Hochtief (Hamburg, Dusseldorf, Sydney, Athens,
Budapest)
22How do investors evaluate airports?
- Investors looking to maximise cash-flows from
airports - Passenger traffic volume and mix (business /
Leisure) and potential for further growth - Limited competition from other airports
- High of origin-destination traffic preferred
- Light handed regulation / regulatory stability
- Diversified sources of revenue
- Mix of airlines
- No significant medium-term capital expenditure
requirements
23Are private airports better?
- Relations between airports and airlines have not
been good since privatisation - Arguments over aeronautical charges and quality
of service - Examples of well managed government-owned
airports - Singapore, Incheon, Manchester
- Globalisation of airport management
- Transfer of management skills / knowledge across
the world - Privatisation has improved regional airport
performance
24Are private airports better?
Sample of European regional airports between 3
and 5 million annual passengers
ownership revenue / cost ratio commercial revenues
Aberdeen 100 private (BAA) 1.6 43
Bordeaux Chambers of Commerce 1.0 44
Leeds Local Councils 1.1 51
Verona Local Councils Chambers of Commerce 1.1 23
Pisa Local Councils Chambers of Commerce 1.2 30
Bologna Local Councils Chambers of Commerce 1.3 45
25Conclusions
- Most major airports / airport authorities still
under government / public sector ownership - Privatisation of airports in many countries is a
controversial issue - Governments in many countries view airports as
vital assets seek to maintain control - Most privatisations have been partial
- Focus on managing airports post-privatisation