Dubai's aviation industry achieved its biggest milestone to date on Sunday, when the emirate's new airport welcomed the arrival of its first commercial flight.
Located in Jebel Ali and part of Dubai World Central, an "aviation city" that the government launched as a free economic zone, Al Maktoum International Airport is expected to become the world's largest airport upon completion.
Like the emirate's main
airport, Dubai International Airport (located 50 kilometers to the
north), Al Maktoum International Airport is owned by the government of
Dubai and operated by Dubai Airports Company.
Although full commercial passenger services were originally scheduled for 2017, the mega project was delayed for years due to the regional financial crisis, and faces a new tentative completion date of 2027.
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Various reports estimate the total cost of the project at 120 billion dirhams ($32.67 billion).
The airport has been open for cargo flights since 2010.
Opening ceremony
Hungarian low-cost
airline Wizz Air was the first airline to be welcomed at the new
passenger terminal, and was greeted with a customary festive water
salute.
Al Maktoum International
Airport's two other launch carriers are Kuwait-based low-cost carrier
Jazeera Airways and Bahrain's full-service Gulf Air, which also made its
inaugural flight to the new airport on Sunday.
The UAE's state-owned carrier Emirates is expected to operate entirely out of the new hub by the time of completion.
In the works
Gulf News
has reported that more airlines are close to signing deals to use the
new airport, with the Dubai Airports CEO hinting at more announcements
to come.
Currently operating just
one main runway, Al Maktoum will ultimately operate five runways with
an annual capacity of 160 million passengers and 12 million tons of
cargo.
To put those numbers
into perspective, the world's current busiest airport,
Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, serviced approximately
95 million passengers in 2012.
Dubai International Airport handled 57.7 million.
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