Moroccan Airports Authority

The Moroccan Airports Authority (French: Office National Des Aéroports, ONDA, Arabic: المكتب الوطني للمطارات‎) is the Moroccan airport operator and administrator. The company headquarters are based in Mohammed V International Airport in Casablanca.

Contents

History

ONDA was established in July 1990 under parliamentary law 14-89. Prior to then, Morocco's airports were administered by the Moroccan Ministry of transport.

One year later, ONDA inaugurated Al Massira Airport in Agadir.

On September 15, 2003, Abdelhanine Benallou, was nominated as new general manager of ONDA.

Serious airport related accidents

Although Morocco has its share in aircraft accidents, the number of serious incidents with fatalities directly related to an airport (approach, take-off or on ground accidents) are very low. The total number of accidents with fatalities in Morocco is 19, resulting in 792 deaths.[1] The same numbers for events directly related to airports are 5 resp. 171.[2]

The majority of the airport related incidents are long ago, the last incident in 1986.

Milestones

Partnerships and agreements

ONDA helped in supervising the construction of Yasser Arafat International Airport which Mohammed V International Airport is twinned with. It also organized training programs for Palestinian engineers in Morocco in 1997 just months before the inauguration of the airport in Gaza in December 1998.

In Mars 14, 2003, ONDA signed a partnership agreement with Côte d'Azur International Airport, Nice, France.

New developments and plans

Around 2004 ONDA created a masterplan to upgrade many facilities by 2010. The main projects are: (the planned completion date in brackets)[3]

Mohammed V International Airport - Casablanca

see also Mohammed V International Airport

Al Massira Airport - Agadir

see also Agadir - Al Massira Airport

Menara Airport - Marrakech

see also Marrakech-Menara Airport

Dahkla Airport

see also Dakhla Airport

Essaouira Mogador

see also Mogador Airport

Ibn Battouta - Tanger

see also Tangier Ibn Battouta Airport

Rabat-Salé

see also Rabat-Salé Airport

Apart from these larger plans some other smaller changes are planned around many airports around the country.

Statistics

As the national operator for all public airports in Morocco the information they publish on flight-movements give a strong indication of the development of visitors and flights to the country. Also the cargo-figures tell something about the economy.

The ONDA publishes monthly reports which contain number of passengers per airport and a over-all total of aircraft-movements (landings and take-offs) and cargo figures for the whole country.

Despite the international crisis, which hits Europe and North-America the most, the Moroccan airport authority reports continously increasing passenger-numbers, aircraft-movements and processed cargo.

Trends

The summer-months are by far the busiest months for passangers. Not only tourists traveling to the main tourist locations as Marrakesh and Agadir see high volumes of passengers, also the airports in the North of Morocco see increasing passenger-numbers. Moroccans who live in Europe tend to visit family during the summer and although many of them still come over by ferry increasing numbers of people come by air. Othet indications of this are for example:

The increase in passengers overall in 2010, compared to 2009 was +14,93%[4] and this trend continued in 2011 - although not as spectacular. The year-on-yar growth in passengernumbers in July 2011 was still +6,28%[5]

Busiest airports

The main international airport, Mohammed V in Casablanca takes over 40% of all aircraft movements (landings and take-offs) and the 2nd airport, Marrakesh, takes another 15%[4][5]

Cargo

Unlike the passanger-numbers the amount of cargo to and from Moroccan airports is quite stable after an initial drop around 2008.

Origin

By far the majority of traffic comes from Europe, where France is responsible for 30-35% of all traffic and the rest of Europe produces 40-45% of all trafic. Domestic flights are responsible for 10% of traffic. Other destinations to/from Morocco are North-America (2-2,5%), Middle & Far-East (5%) and Arfica (Maghreb: 3,5; rest of Africa: 6%)[4][5]

References

  1. ^ Figures from Aviation Saf. database. report Morocco. visited July 27, 2008
  2. ^ Airport related incidents from same source. Only accidents from 1950 counted and only when directly related to Moroccan airports (APR, Init clb etc).
  3. ^ ONDA website, visited 15 July 2008
  4. ^ a b c ONDA statistics on December 2010, retrieved 11 December, 2011
  5. ^ a b c ONDA statistics on December 2010, retrieved 11 December, 2011

External links

Morocco portal
Aviation portal