Istanbul to unveil new airport, seeks to be world’s biggest
ISTANBUL: Recep Tayyip Erdogan has held plenty of grand opening
ceremonies in his 15 years at Turkey’s helm. On Monday he will unveil
one of his prized jewels — Istanbul New Airport — a megaproject that has
been dogged by concerns about labor rights, environmental issues and
Turkey’s weakening economy.
Erdogan is opening what he claims will eventually become the world’s
largest air transport hub on the 95th anniversary of Turkey’s
establishment as a republic. It’s a symbolic launch, as only limited
flights will begin days later and a full move won’t take place until the
end of the year.
Tens of thousands of workers have been scrambling to finish the airport
to meet Erdogan’s Oct. 29 deadline. Protests in September over poor
working conditions and dozens of construction deaths have highlighted
the human cost of the project.
Istanbul New Airport, on shores of the Black Sea, will serve 90 million
passengers annually in its first phase. At its completion in ten years,
it will occupy nearly 19,000 acres and serve up to 200 million travelers
a year with six runways. That’s almost double the traffic at world’s
biggest airport currently, Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson.
“This airport is going to be the most important hub between Asia and
Europe,” Kadri Samsunlu, head of the 5-company consortium Istanbul Grand
Airport, told reporters Thursday.
The airport’s interiors nod to Turkish and Islamic designs and its
tulip-shaped air traffic control tower won the 2016 International
Architecture Award. It also uses mobile applications and artificial
intelligence for customers, is energy efficient and boasts a high-tech
security system.
All aviation operations will move there at the end of December when
Istanbul’s main international airport, named after Turkey’s founder
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, is closed down. Ataturk Airport now handles 64
million people a year. On the Asian side of the city, Sabiha Gokcen
Airport handled 31 million passengers last year. It will remain open.
Erdogan is expected to announce the official name of the new airport, part of his plan to transform Turkey into a global player.
Turkish Airlines will launch its first flights out of the new airport to
three local destinations: Ankara, Antalya and Izmir. It will also fly
to Baku and Ercan in northern Cyprus.
Nihat Demir, head of a construction workers’ union, said the rush to
meet Erdogan’s deadline has been a major cause of the accidents and
deaths at the site that employs 36,000 people.
“The airport has become a cemetery,” he told The Associated Press,
describing the pressure to finish as relentless and blaming long working
hours for leading to “carelessness, accidents and deaths.”
The Dev-Yapi-Is union has identified 37 worker deaths at the site and claimed more than 100 dead remain unidentified.
Turkey’s Ministry of Labor has denied media reports about hundreds of
airport construction deaths, saying in February that 27 workers had died
at the site due to “health problems and traffic accidents.” It has not
commented since then.
Airport workers in September began a strike against poor working
conditions, including unpaid salaries, bedbugs, unsafe food and
inadequate transport to the site. Security forces rounded up hundreds of
workers and formally arrested nearly 30, among them union leaders. The
company said it was working to improve conditions.
Megaprojects in northern Istanbul like the airport, the third bridge
connecting Istanbul’s Asian and European shores and Erdogan’s
yet-to-start plans for a man-made canal parallel to the Bosporus strait
are also impacting the environment. The environmental group Northern
Forests Defense said the new airport has destroyed forests, wetlands and
coastal sand dunes and threatens biodiversity.
These projects are spurring additional construction of transportation
networks, housing and business centers in already overpopulated
Istanbul, where more than 15 million people live. Samsunlu, the airport
executive, said an “airport city” for innovation and technology would
also be built.
The five Turkish companies that won the $29 billion tender in 2013 under
the “build-operate-transfer” model have been financing the project
through capital and bank loans. IGA will operate the airport for 25
years.
Financial observers say lending has fueled much of Turkey’s growth and
its construction boom, leaving the private sector with a huge $200
billion debt. With inflation and unemployment in Turkey at double digits
and a national currency that has lost as much as 40 percent of its
value against the dollar this year, economists say Turkey is clearly
facing an economic downturn.
Despite those dark financial clouds, the airport consortium hopes the
world’s growing aviation industry will generate both jobs and billions
of dollars in returns.
“Istanbul New Airport will remain ambitious for growth and we will carry
on mastering the challenge to be the biggest and the best. That’s our
motto,” Samsunlu said.
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