Yes it’s quite the strategic asset. Just wish the paltry remaining pax services would move to GLA. The Glasgow area can’t support 2 international pax airports.Bearsden wrote: ↑Tue Dec 21, 2021 8:38 pm I await the published accounts to comment further but an Operating Profit and an Asset Revaluation point to a far better short to medium term financial position than both EDI & GLA who are losing multi £m today and have 15 to 20 times the debt around their necks with their main revenue stream being terminal passengers
Yes, the state put funds into the airport and are writing off the annual interest on its loan capital but the sums are relatively speaking small - the key is cash generation after expenditure on fixed assets
I have said before that there will be an argument that Ryanair's passenger operations may be loss-making on a standalone basis but they are an efficient way to route aircraft in and out its maintenance facility thus maintaining and creating local jobs
Neither EDI nor GLA have invested in the infrastructure to handle multiple heavy military transports / tankers likewise neither has heavy freight handling facilities for An-124s, B748s etc . . . and today neither has the cash to invest in that kind of infrastructure
PIK has no doubt made a tidy sum from the 6 (now 5) ex Norwegian B787s which have been sitting for two years
Other than that it presents no problems to me at all.