B/CA Show News - NBAA 2007 Day 1 - (Page 74) MIDDLE EAST TAKES OFF N BA A 2007 Middle East BizAv Booming: Fleet Seen Doubling by 2012 Business aviation is thriving in the Middle East, and the fleet of around 320 aircraft is set to more than double by 2012. This isn’t just a forecast; it is based on aircraft orders already announced, with deliveries slated between now and that year, says Ali Ahmed Al Naqbi, chairman of the Middle East Business Aviation Association. The MEBAA area of influence covers all Arab League countries and stretches as far west as Algeria and Libya and north into Syria. MEBAA membership has risen from around 30 members at the start of the year to 55 now, and includes some Western-based OEMs and other interested parties. The first two-day Middle East Business Aviation (MEBA) show was such a success earlier in the year (in Dubai with 30 aircraft on the adjacent ramp) that show organizers say indoor exhibition space is on course to double in size in 2008. This will be MEBA’s first full three-day event and will run from Nov. 16-18; it will alternate biennially with the Dubai Air Show. Not bad for a show that started as a one-day seminar/networking event held alongside the 2005 Dubai Air Show. Middle Eastern business aviation is booming not only with orders for Boeing and Airbus VVIP governmental-size aircraft, but all the way down to smaller business aircraft and VIP helicopters. Cessna sales are doing particularly well, and Piaggio picked up an order for six Avanti IIs earlier in the year. Al Naqbi says that the stable growth in the region is driving greater interest in business aviation. Most aircraft are, according to Al Naqbi, bought either by private individuals or corporations, and Ali Ahmed Al Naqbi is chairman of MEBAA. Business jets crowd the tarmac at the semiannual Dubai Air Show—the next one is November 11-15. then managed under a local charter operators AOC. This route is favored by many, as the aircraft owner gets priority use of the aircraft. He said that business is particularly strong in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Bahrain and Oman, and aircraft are being used by a new generation of entrepreneurs. Business aviation infrastructure is also fast expanding, with both Jet Aviation and ExecuJet offering FBO and MRO services at Dubai International, and they have been joined recently by Dubai Executive Flight Service, offering another ultra-luxury FBO to handle the swelling numbers of business jets. The world’s largest airport, Jebel Ali, is being built ($33 billion) some 35 miles away from Dubai City and will have its own Executive Jet Center. Infrastructure spending throughout the Gulf region continues apace backed by local and Western partnerships. —Mike Vines Dubai Exec Center Will Be ‘World’s Best’ “Build the facility, and the market will come to it.” That’s the philosophy of UAE Vice President, Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum in developing a world-beating business jet center for the region. The Executive Jet Center was unveiled at MEBA by Sheikh Ahmed Bin Saeed Al Maktoum, president of the Department of Civil Aviation and chairman of the Emirates Group. The center, located at the new, $8.1 billion Dubai World Central International airport, will be able to handle up to 100,000 flights a year when it opens at the end of next year. Dubai World Central is a $33 billion, 140-sq. km. urban aviation city being developed some 30 kms. from Dubai city center in Jebel Ali. FBOs and business jet operators will be en74 couraged to build their own facilities and hangars at the Executive Jet Centre. Business aviation in the Middle East has been fuelled by economic success, but it is seen in itself as a further economic driver. “That is, of course, if we give it a helping hand,” said Sheikh Ahmed. September 25, 2007 www.aviationweek.com/shownews http://www.aviationweek.com/shownews
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