Thursday, December 26, 2024

Construction begins on second runway at Guadalajara airport

Although business travel in Mexico is expected to take three years to recover from the effects of the coronavirus pandemic, Guadalajara is banking on a 2023 rebound and going forward with a planned airport expansion.

The Pacific Airport Group (GAP) which operates the Guadalajara International Airport, has begun construction of a second runway, part of a five-year plan to increase the airport’s capacity that will likely see a two-year delay due to the events of 2020.

News that work had begun on the runway was shared at a meeting with representatives of the meetings and conventions sector who gathered to discuss accelerating its revitalization. 

Present at the meeting was the president of Expo Guadalajara, Guillermo Cervantes Fernández, who said that GAP “had announced a very important investment before the pandemic for the airports of Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta and [Sunday] they ratified it, although with a different calendar due to the pandemic, but they confirmed that all its investments will be made by 2026.”

The planned expansion gives Jalisco an opportunity to continue its growth of the meetings and conventions industry, despite projections that 2021 will see a 30% decline in that sector from 2019 numbers.

Last year 597 meetings and conventions brought two million visitors and created an economic spillover of 21.7 billion pesos, just over US $1 billion, but this year Cervantes expects that number to be just 10 billion pesos.

The airport expansion had previously been delayed due to a dispute with communal landowners who said they had not been compensated for the 1951 expropriation of land for the facility and refused to give up any more land.

But the airport operator announced in August 2019 it would build a new runway on land it already owns.

Source: El Economista (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Claudia Sheinbaum, who's election was one of Mexico's biggest news stories in 2024

Mexico’s year in review: The 10 biggest news and politics stories of 2024

0
It was a year of great change in Mexico, as López Obrador bowed out of public life and President Claudia Sheinbaum stepped into power.
The project addresses a major cross-border pollution problem by treating the sewage flowing north from the Tijuana River.

Tijuana River cleanup takes major step forward

2
Imperial Beach in San Diego, just north of the Mexico-U.S. border, is one of the country's most polluted beaches due to sewage flow from the Tijuana River.
Ears of dried corn in a big pile

Mexico loses GM corn trade dispute with US

9
Mexico will have to modify its restrictions on genetically modified corn imports after a trade dispute panel sided with the United States.