DAESP
DAESP - Departamento Aeroviário do Estado de São Paulo (English: Airports Department of the State of São Paulo) is the department of aviation of the state of São Paulo in Brazil. DAESP is part of the Secretaria de Transportes do Governo do Estado de São Paulo (English: Transportation Secretariat of the State of São Paulo), and is responsible for the operation of 32 public airports within the state, in accordance to directives from the National Civil Aviation Agency of Brazil (ANAC).
It was created in 1963 as the Diretoria de Aeroportos (English: Directorate of Airports) of the Secretaria de Viação e Obras Públicas (English: Public Buildings and Transit Secretariat). This Directorate gave origin to DAESP in 1966.[1]
List of airports administered by DAESP
The following airports are administered by DAESP:[2]
- Andradina
- Araçatuba – Dario Guarita Airport
- Araraquara – Bartolomeu de Gusmão Airport
- Assis – Marcelo Pires Halzhausen Airport
- Avaré / Arandu – Comte. Luiz Gonzaga Luth Airport
- Barretos – Chafei Amsei Airport
- Bauru – Bauru Airport
- Bauru / Arealva – Moussa Nakhl Tobias Airport
- Botucatu
- Bragança Paulista – Arthur Siqueira Airport
- Campinas – Campo dos Amarais Airport
- Dracena
- Franca – Ten. Lund Presetto Airport
- Ilha Solteira (Urubupungá) – (temporarily closed)
- Itanhaém
- Jundiaí – Comte. Rolim Adolfo Amaro Airport
- Lins – Gov. Lucas Nogueira Garcez Airport
- Marília – Frank Miloye Milenkowichi Airport
- Ourinhos – Jornalista Benedito Pimentel Airport
- Penápolis
- Piracicaba – Pedro Morganti Airport
- Presidente Epitácio
- Presidente Prudente – Presidente Prudente Airport
- Registro
- Ribeirão Preto – Dr. Leite Lopes Airport
- São Carlos – Mário Pereira Lopes Airport
- São José do Rio Preto – Prof. Eribelto Manoel Reino Airport
- São Manuel
- Sorocaba – Bertram Luiz Leupolz Airport
- Tupã
- Ubatuba – Gastão Madeira Airport
- Votuporanga – Domingos Pignatari Airport
Top 5
In 2012 those were the top 5 airports according to number of transported passengers, metric tonnes of cargo handled, and number of aircraft operations:[3]
Number of transported passengers
- 1 - Ribeirão Preto – Dr. Leite Lopes Airport – 1,077,010
- 2 - São José do Rio Preto – Prof. Eribelto Manoel Reino Airport – 770,569
- 3 - Presidente Prudente – Presidente Prudente Airport – 289,124
- 4 - Bauru/Arealva – Moussa Nakhl Tobias Airport – 177,516
- 4 - Araçatuba – Dario Guarita Airport – 160,571
Metric tonnes of cargo handled
- 1 - Bauru/Arealva – Moussa Nakhl Tobias Airport – 1,901
- 4 – Marília – Frank Miloye Milenkowichi Airport – 904
- 2 - Ribeirão Preto – Dr. Leite Lopes Airport – 649
- 3 - Jundiaí – Comte. Rolim Adolfo Amaro Airport – 555
- 5 - São José do Rio Preto – Prof. Eribelto Manoel Reino Airport – 520
Number of aircraft operations
- 1 - Jundiaí – Comte. Rolim Adolfo Amaro Airport – 99,284
- 2 - Sorocaba – Bertram Luiz Leupolz Airport – 77,420
- 3 - Ribeirão Preto – Dr. Leite Lopes Airport – 60,538
- 4 – Bragança Paulista – Arthur Siqueira Airport – 42,936
- 5 - Campinas – Campo dos Amarais Airport – 33,501
Other Airports in the State of São Paulo
Five of the most important airports of the State of São Paulo are operated by Infraero:[4]
- Campinas – Viracopos International Airport
- São José dos Campos – Prof. Urbano Ernesto Stumpf Airport
- São Paulo
- Campo de Marte Airport
- Congonhas Airport
- Guarulhos-Gov. André Franco Montoro International Airport
See also
References
- ↑ "Sobre o DAESP" (in Portuguese). DAESP. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
- ↑ "Aeroportos administrados pelo DAESP" (in Portuguese). DAESP. Retrieved 30 August 2010.
- ↑ "Estatísticas" (in Portuguese). DAESP. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
- ↑ List of Infraero Airports in São Paulo