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New
terminal at Dublin Airport
Most airports
have faced the need for further expansion, with more and more people
availing of cheaper flights to take to the air. In many cases, such
as Milan and Munich, decisions were made to cater for this burgeoning
demand by building new airports further away from the cities they serve.
Such a solution ought to have been considered for Dublin, instead of
permitting Aer Rianta and its successor, the Dublin Airport Authority
(DAA), to aggrandise the existing airport at Collinstown, merely because
that is where it has been located since the original terminal and runway
were built in 1939. When Bord
na Móna suggested that a new airport for the Dublin area could
be built on cutaway bog somewhere near Portarlington, conveniently located
to both the main rail and motorway networks, the proposal was never
seriously entertained. In the Dáil on 22 June 2005, in reply
to questions regarding the proposed new runway at Dublin Airport, then
minister for transport Martin Cullen said: "I have no proposal
to commission any study of alternative options for the provision of
airport capacity to serve the greater Dublin Area. Subject to planning
permission, it is envisaged that the DAA will provide such capacity
through the expansion of existing facilities and infrastructure at Dublin
Airport". This head-in-the-sand
approach left the DAA to get on with its own masterplan for doubling
the capacity of the existing airport, including a new terminal building
and second main runway, both of which were backed by Fingal County Council
for whom the airport complex is the most significant money-spinner in
generating commercial rates revenue. The cost of implementing the overall
masterplan is estimated at €2 billion, of which Terminal 2 alone
accounts for over €600 million. Yet, as opponents of the airport's
expansion have pointed out, not one element of the masterplan has been
subjected to rigorous cost-benefit analysis, as required by Department
of Finance guidelines for all capital projects costing more than €30
million. Even though An Bord Pleanála has now granted planning permission for the second runway and the first phase of Terminal 2, it must still be a matter for the Government - not least as the DAA's principal shareholder - to ensure that these very expensive capital projects are subjected to proper scrutiny to ensure that what's being planned is in the public interest. |