At least 12 brand new private jets ordered by
Nigerians and some corporate bodies will be delivered to the country this year.
This is an offshoot of the projection by private
jet manufacturers to deliver 70 brand new private jets to the country within
the next five years.
The Regional Vice-President, Sales, Middle East,
Africa and Turkey, Bombardier Business Aircraft, the Canada-based aircraft
manufacturing firm, Mr. Khadar Mattar, who made the disclosure in an exclusive
interview with our correspondent, described the private jet market in Nigeria
as currently “booming.”
He spoke on the sidelines of Nigerian Economic
Summit organized by London-based Economist in Lagos on Monday.
Mattar, who said his company delivered 88 out of
the 138 aircraft currently flying in Nigeria, noted that Bombardier was
currently the market leader in terms of the number of aircraft in Africa.
He said, “In Nigeria, we are looking at another
60 to 70 new business aircraft within the next five years; that is about 10
airplanes a year. There are 138 airplanes in Nigeria at the moment.
“Bombardier is currently leading the market in
Nigeria and Africa. Twelve new ones should be delivered this year.”
According to him, the 12 new business aircraft to
be delivered to Nigeria this year will be supplied by Bombardier and other
private jet manufacturers, which he did not mention.
He also did not give the organisations and people
who had ordered for the private jets in the country.
Other private jet manufacturers with significant
market share in Nigeria are Embraer, Hawker Beechcraft, Gulfstream and Cessna
Citation.
The state-of-the-art private jets being flown by
business moguls, pastors, politicians and public office holders in the country
are made by one of these manufacturers.
Mattar said medium-size and large-size private
jets were currently more in demand in Nigeria because their owners were flying
them to longer distances in Africa, Europe and other continents for business
engagements.
As a result, he said the demand for small-size
private jets were relatively low.
Most medium-size and large-size private jets
currently go for between $30m and $65m.
Taking an average price of $40m per aircraft, the
12 new private jets slated for delivery in Nigeria this year are expected to
cost about $480m (N76.8bn).
Also, the 70 new private jets projected for
delivery in the country over the next five years are estimated to be about
$2.8bn (N448bn).
The Bombardier senior official also said he
expected the 138 private jets currently in the country to double to 276 in the
next 10 years because of the manner the business aircraft market was growing in
Nigeria.
Mattar said, “The business aviation market in
Nigeria is booming. It is actually its time. I will expect that it will double
in size in the next 10 years. People are flying outside Nigeria now; people are
flying within Africa because of their business expansion; people are flying to
Europe because of their business expansion and the financials that they
require.
“Nigeria as a country has actually changed; we
have more laws and regulations. Infrastructure is changing, which is adapting
to the new expansion. Because of this, you will see more private jets actually
flying in Nigeria.”
Aviation experts and analysts have said that
Nigeria is the fastest growing aviation market in the world after China.
According to them, the global financial meltdown
has made the private jet market to slow down in Europe and the United States,
and private jet manufacturers are now turning to the Middle East, China and
Africa for survival.
In the last two years, private jet manufacturers
from the US, Europe and other parts have held several exhibitions in Nigeria
and other parts of Africa in their bid to outdo one another.
A London-based aviation expert and Chief
Executive Officer, African Aviation, Mr. Nick Fadugba, said lack of effective
air link within Africa had created a major opportunity for the growth of the
business aviation market on the continent.
He said most times, people travelled to Europe
first on commercial airlines before they could connect some cities in Africa.
But the Bombardier official said Nigeria and
other African governments needed to improve on existing aviation infrastructure
to ensure more growth for the business aviation or the private jet sector
within the continent.
Mattar said, “I am very optimistic about the
business aviation market in Africa. People are now taking it seriously. They
are looking at investing in fixed-base operations. They are looking at smaller
airports to develop within and outside Africa.
“But it takes time. Infrastructure is needed. It
is that serious in Africa, which is good for the business aircraft because
people need to fly. Imagine I want to fly from Lagos to Namibia; it takes me
two days to get there on commercial airlines. I will have to go to South Africa
first before going to Namibia, or I have to go to Europe first. But with
business aircraft, I can go and come back the same day and do my business.”
Culled from PUNCH NEWS
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