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 organised 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.”
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