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View Full Version : Don Muang to be reactivated for national flights:April 2007



January 29th, 2007, 22:03
Don Muang to be resurrected

Airlines can resume domestic flights at old airport; international traffic will continue at troubled new facility

Airlines have been given the option of returning operations to the decommissioned Bangkok International Airport at Don Muang while repairs are made at the Bt150-billion Suvarnabhumi Airport.

The Transport Ministry recommended yesterday that carriers offering direct domestic flights be allowed to return to the old airport. It said it would take between 45 day and 60 days to prepare Don Muang to accept flights and passengers again.

International flights will continue to use Suvarnabhumi Airport.

The resolution will be tabled at the February 6 Cabinet meet-ing, Transport Minister Theera Haocharoen said after meeting yesterday with top transport officials. "The return to Don Muang is on a voluntary basis and is required to reduce inconvenience at Suvarnabhumi, where runway, taxiway, parking-bay and passenger-terminal repairs are under way," he said. "These could cause inconvenience now that Suvarnabhumi is busy with domestic and international flights."

He said it was not known if the return would be made permanent. But, he said, from discussions with airlines, moving domestic flights to Don Muang would reduce all traffic at Suvarnabhumi by 30 per cent. At present, Suvarnabhumi accommodates 1,150 domestic flights per week.

Theera believed a return to Don Muang would not trouble car-riers. They would require ground services only and not heavy, permanent equipment installed at Suvarnabhumi. In a January 11 resolution, the Airports of Thailand board approved spending of Bt66 million to prepare Don Muang. It will need to provide other facilities and services, including taxis and buses.

Deputy Transport Minister Sansern Wongcha-um noted almost all domestic carriers were ready and willing to return to Don Muang. Airports of Thailand will discuss how expenses incurred will be met. "Airlines should be able to shoulder the expenses," he said.

Open just four months, Suvarnabhumi is operating near its capacity of 45 million passengers a year. Based on the current volume of arrivals and departures, it is calculated Suvarnabhumi is operating at a level equivalent to 43 million passengers a year.

Sansern expected the move back to Don Muang would see a delay to the building of a new passenger terminal at Suvarnabhumi. Orient-Thai Airlines chief executive Udom Tantiprasongchai said its One-Two-Go Airlines was ready to return to Don Muang.

"As a result of lower operating costs, this should allow us to register a 20-per-cent increase in passenger numbers this year, up from our original target of 10 per cent," he said, adding the airline needed to spend about Bt40 million on equipment at its Don Muang facilities.

A Transport Ministry source said agencies at yesterday's meeting suggested Thai Airways International maintain key domestic flights at Suvarnabhumi. This is to accommodate foreign tourists who need connecting flights to internal tourist destinations. If these flights are operated from Suvarnabhumi, travellers will be inconvenienced. Earlier, Thai Airways said it was ready to relocate non-transit domestic flights to Don Muang.

However, flights to and from Phuket and Chiang Mai will remain at Suvarnabhumi owning to the volume of international connections to and from these destinations.

The Nation

January 30th, 2007, 06:57
options - ifs - buts - maybes

How long before they actually do it?

January 30th, 2007, 15:34
DELETED

January 30th, 2007, 17:19
Some flights will use Don Muang

The Transport Ministry has agreed to move some domestic flights from Suvarnabhumi airport back to Don Muang to reduce congestion at the new airport, which requires space for repairs.
Transport Minister Theera Haocharoen said yesterday the plan will go to the cabinet for approval next Tuesday. Relocation of flights, on a voluntary basis, would be 45-60 days after that. The board of Airports of Thailand Plc (AoT) on Jan 11 called for the reopening of Don Muang airport for domestic flights with no international connections.

Adm Theera and his deputy Sansern Wongcha-um backed the move at a meeting with executives of the Civil Aviation Department and AoT yesterday. Adm Theera said cracked taxiways and runways, damaged airbridges and problems in the passenger terminal had caused congestion at Suvarnabhumi airport. The partial return to Don Muang would ease congestion by about 30% and allow repairs. "The return will be on a voluntary basis. It is not compulsory. Any party that wants to remain at Suvarnabhumi can stay," he said. He was seriously worried about problems at Suvarnabhumi, especially issues that concern safety on taxiways, runways and in the passenger terminal.

Civil Aviation Department director-general Chaisak Angsuwan said some facilities at the new airport needed partial closure for repairs. Neither he nor Adm Theera could say if Don Muang should return to active service permanently. That would depend on work at Suvarnabhumi.

Thai Airways International president Apinan Sumanaseni said it would assign part of its staff to Don Muang airport. Flights to Chiang Mai, Krabi and Phuket would be available at both airports and THAI would provide a passenger shuttle service. He suggested the use of Don Muang's domestic terminal to keep passengers' walk short. Thai AirAsia chief executive officer Tassapon Bijleveld said the airline could not move only its domestic flights to Don Muang because its domestic and international flights had to share aircraft.

Don Muang airport director Pinit Saraithong said it could be re-activated for domestic services in two weeks. However, it would take 45 days to ensure safety because the airport's western runway was uneven and must be repaired.

But AoT prefers to use International Terminal 1 at Don Muang as it is already active for government and chartered flights. An upgrade would cost about 66 million baht and include renovating the terminal and the recruitment of commercial and transport service providers.

Extracted from Bangkok Post, Jan 30, 2007
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January 30th, 2007, 20:50
Gee, I wonder who's profiting from this little boondoggle?