Vinci Airports: Difference between revisions
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The company's subsidiaries in 2022: |
The company's subsidiaries in 2022: |
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* SEAGI – Grenoble |
* SEAGI – Grenoble Airport 100% |
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* SEACA – Chambéry |
* SEACA – [[Chambéry Airport]] 100% |
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* SEACFA – Clermont-Ferrand airport 100% |
* SEACFA – Clermont-Ferrand airport 100% |
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* SEAPA – Ancenis Airport 100% |
* SEAPA – Ancenis Airport 100% |
Revision as of 01:45, 5 May 2023
Industry | Concessions |
---|---|
Headquarters | France |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Nicolas Notebaert (Chairman) since 2008 |
Services | Airports operator |
Revenue | €2.679 billion (2022)[1] |
€507 million (2022)[1] | |
Parent | Vinci SA, Vinci Concessions |
Website | www.vinci-airports.com |
Vinci Airports is a subsidiary of Vinci Group, which develops and operates airport platforms. The company develops a network of 65 airports in 12 countries, among which France, Portugal, Brazil, United States, Cambodia, Japan, Dominican Republic, Chile, Serbia, United Kingdom, and Costa Rica.
History and development
In 1995, Vinci Airports obtained its first airport concession. A contract was signed, via its subsidiary Cambodia Airports, until 2040 for the airports of Phnom Penh and Siem Reap. Since 2006, Vinci Airports has also held the concession for a third international airport in Cambodia: Sihanoukville.[2]
In France Vinci Airports won its first tender for Grenoble Airport in 2003, followed by a second in 2004 for Chambéry Airport.
VINCI Airports was set up in Chile in 2015. The Nuevo Pudahuel consortium, including Vinci Airports (40%), Aéroports de Paris (45%) and Astaldi (15%), took over the operation of Santiago de Chile Airport for 20 years.[3]
It was also in 2015 that Vinci Airports and its partner Orix were appointed prospective concessionaires for Kansai and Osaka International airports for a 44-year period starting 1 April 2016.[4]
In 2018 Vinci Airports signed the concession contract for Belgrade Airport[5] and officially became the concessionaire in December 2018 for a 25-year term. In April 2018, Vinci Airports announced the acquisition of Airports Worldwide,[6] a U.S. airport concession company, and thus became concessionaire for 8 airports including Belfast Airport,[7] Stockholm-Skavsta Airport, Orlando-Sanford Airport, Daniel-Oduber-Quirós Airport.[8]
In December 2018 Vinci Airports reached an agreement to buy 50.01% of the shares in Gatwick Airport Limited, the company that owns London Gatwick Airport, from its current shareholders, enabling it to become the majority shareholder for €3.2 billion.[9][10]
In 2021 Vinci Airports won the concession for seven new airports (Manaus, Tabatinga, Téfé, Cruzeiro do Sul, Porto Velho, Rio Branco, Boa Vista) in the Amazon region of northern Brazil, for 30 years.[11]
In December 2022 Vinci Airports acquired 30% of OMA (Grupo Aeroportuario del Centro Norte), the leading Mexican airport operator, which operates 13 airports in that country.[12]
Subsidiaries
The company's subsidiaries in 2022:
- SEAGI – Grenoble Airport 100%
- SEACA – Chambéry Airport 100%
- SEACFA – Clermont-Ferrand airport 100%
- SEAPA – Ancenis Airport 100%
- SEATH – Toulon-Hyères airport
- ANA – Aeroportos de Portugal 100%
- Aeropuertos Dominicanos Siglo XXI (Aerodom) 100%
- Concessionária do Aeroporto de Salvador S.A. 100%
- Concessionária dos Aeroportos da Amazônia S.A. 100%
- Aéroports du Grand Ouest 85%
- Cambodia Airports 70%
- SEARD – Rennes and Dinard airports 49%
- Nuevo Pudahuel 40%
- Kansai Airports 40%
- Aéroports de Lyon 31%
- Gatwick Airport Limited 50.01%
- Annecy Mont-Blanc Airport 100%
- Belfast International 100%
- Belgrade Airport 100%
- Guanacaste Airport 45%
- OMA (Mexico) 30%
References
- ^ a b "2022 Full Year Results Presentation". Vinci.
- ^ TTR Weekly (16 January 2019). "Cambodia airports hit new milestone".
- ^ DFNI Frontier (5 February 2015). "Nuevo Pudahuel consortium to build new international terminal at Santiago de Chile".
- ^ FT (3 May 2016). "Robots are coming, Wall Street scourge and curse of the salaryman".
- ^ Euractiv (11 January 2018). "French Vinci gets concession for Belgrade airport".
- ^ Globe Newswire (24 April 2018). "OMERS Infrastructure Agrees to Sale of Airports Worldwide to Vinci Airports".
- ^ The Irish News (24 April 2018). "New French owners for Belfast International Airport".
- ^ "The march of a global airports brand". 21 June 2018.
- ^ The Guardian (27 December 2018). "Gatwick airport: majority stake sold to French group".
- ^ BBC News (27 December 2018). "Gatwick Airport: Majority stake sold to French firm".
- ^ Airport World (7 April 2021). "VINCI Airports adds seven Brazilian gateways to global network".
- ^ Bloomberg (31 July 2022). "Vinci to Buy Nearly 30% Stake in Mexico Airport Operator OMA".