
Abuja International Airport
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- http://www.faannigeria.org/nigeria-airport.php?airport=3
- City
- Abuja
- Country
- Nigeria
- Runways
- 3660m x 60m
3609m x 60m - Airlines presently operating to this airport with scheduled services
- Aero
Air Nigeria
Arik Air
ASKY Airlines
British Airways
Dana Airlines
EgyptAir
Ethiopian Airlines
First Nation Airways
KLM Royal Dutch Airlines
Lufthansa - Airlines presently operating to this airport via codeshare
- Brussels Airlines
Delta Air Lines
United Airlines
Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport serves the Nigerian city of Abuja and is among the busiest in the country. The airport is operated by the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria. Approximately 15 airlines fly to a range of domestic and international destinations.
Location of Abuja International Airport, Nigeria
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144 total articles
and
Abuja International Airport to receive second runway
Abuja Airport international terminal plans completed, contract to be awarded before year-end
Nigerian Government to discuss Kano service cancellation with KLM
Nigerian senate investigating power failures at Abuja airport
KLM to cancel service to Abuja and Kano from 01-Jun-2012
Abuja airport to get new ring road and car parking facility
Nigeria calls for British Airways and Virgin Atlantic to lower fares
Lagos and Abuja airports resort to manual handling after end of Maevis Limited concession
Arik Air strengthening Lagos-London Heathrow service
Arik Air may suspend Abuja-London Heathrow service due to airport dispute
Air France to resume Paris CDG-Abuja service in Jun-2012
Abuja Airport power problems result in flight cancellations
Air France-KLM to reportedly adjust Nigeria operations
Nigeria to investigate power failures at Abuja Airport
First Nation Airways launches second route
6,361 total articles
and
A diverging West Africa: Ghana finds over-capacity while Nigeria struggles with too little
Only 402km apart, Accra and Lagos could not have more different aviation markets. Accra has found itself with excess capacity, and consequently Brussels Airlines and United Airlines are withdrawing their respective services from Brussels and Washington DC while Delta Air Lines will reduce overall capacity. Meanwhile in Nigeria, the country's lack of capacity has become a national discussion after the Government threatened to suspend British Airways (BA) and Virgin Atlantic for having expensive fares. But the focus has shifted to the Government and its unwillingness to liberalise air service agreements, which are operating at the maximum for UK carriers, as well as its lack of support for a homegrown aviation industry.
This month Air Nigeria will commence Lagos-London services, adding to the market and further utilising Nigerian capacity to the UK, raising the chances of Nigeria being willing to expand its air service agreement with the UK, which has seen little change since 1999. There are 14,000 weekly seats from Ghana to Europe and 33,000 from Nigeria to Europe, despite Nigeria having a population and GDP five to six times larger. The potential in Nigeria is waiting to be unlocked by a government that in the Corruption Perceptions Index ranks 143rd out of 182nd most corrupt nations.
Air Nigeria to resume long-haul network as West African aviation grows
Air Nigeria is resuming its long-haul network after services were cut during a period of restructuring, ownership transfer and re-branding three years ago. The privately held flag carrier, formerly known as Virgin Nigeria and briefly as Nigeria Eagle Airlines, will resume long-haul services in May-2012 to London Gatwick and Johannesburg with plans in the short-term to launch Rome and Paris services.
The Lagos-based carrier has had a false start, expecting last year to resume long-haul flights in Sep-2011, but plans this time are more concrete, with Air Nigeria loading schedules and fares. Its planned services will see notable competition, but like many routes in and out of Africa, are typically high-yielding. Air Nigeria’s forthcoming Lagos-London route is the latest in West Africa-Europe expansion, following notable capacity increases from Brussels Airlines.
Natural resources and economic growth draw Turkish Airlines to Africa
Turkish Airlines’ bullish African expansion plans will see the carrier launch service to several destinations in 2012 and upgrade many existing routes to twice daily. The carrier’s focus for 2012 is on expanding in emerging markets, primarily Africa, as further network expansion in the US is on hold and plans for launching service to Australia will likely not materialise until at least 2013.
Turkish currently operates 18 destinations in Africa, including Misrata in Libya which was launched in Dec-2011. Turkish CEO Temel Kotil told CAPA in Dec-2011 that the carrier plans to launch in 2012 Abuja and Kano in Nigeria; Kigali in Rwanda; Abidjan in Cote d’Ivoire; and Mogadishu in Somalia.
The carrier has since also announced plans to launch in 2012 Kinshasa in The Democratic Republic of the Congo, which could give Turkish an African network of 24 destinations by the end of this year.
Nigeria and Ghana driving West African aviation development
West Africa’s aviation industry is being led forward by Nigeria and Ghana. In Nigeria, the largest carrier, Arik Air, recently revealed itself as Boeing’s un-named B747-8 customer, while national carrier Air Nigeria is in the process of re-establishing its long-haul network. While the airlines are not without their problems, the market is growing and new entrants are appearing. In Ghana, the country is opening up to international carriers who are eager to increase their frequencies to the gold-producing country. Ghana itself is the site of one of Africa’s newest carrier, Starbow Airlines, and an impending base for pan-African LCC, Fly540.
Airbus predicted cities in these two countries, Accra and Lagos, will become “airline megacities” in the next 20 years, meaning they will handle 10,000 or more long-haul passengers a day. Accra and Lagos are two of just six** African cities tipped to become an “airline megacity”.
Arik Air orders two 747-8s to continue expansion as Nigeria's largest carrier
Arik Air on 06-Oct-2011 was identified as the carrier who anonymously purchased two Boeing 747-8 aircraft on 15-Jun-2011. The purchase injects life into the aircraft programme, which only has two other disclosed airline customers although Boeing has continuously said it expects the freighter variant to be far more successful than the passenger version. More important is the aircraft's affect on Nigerian aviation and cementing the position of Arik Air as the regional leader.
Arik Air says it intends to operate the B747-8s on its "key long-haul routes". Arik Air only currently operates to London Heathrow, New York JFK and Johannesburg. The carrier announced this week its intention to launch thrice weekly service to Abu Dhabi on 29-Nov-2011 with A340-500s. With London Heathrow being Nigeria's largest long-haul market, slot-constrained and facing more competition, the airport has very good chances of receiving Arik Air's B747-8 service.
LCCs ready for take-off; carriers prepare for Boeing B787 deliveries
LCC start-ups dominated airline news this week. Air Canada revealed it is drawing up a business plan to launch an LCC in response to its fast-growing low-cost rivals such as WestJet, Porter Airlines, Air Transat and Sunwing in the Canadian market, according to reports.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.
- Buy a CAPA Membership now!
- Contact us for a demonstration of the CAPA Membership service!
- Call us on +61 2 9241 3200.




