ECONOMY

Greek/Indian venture aims to start work on Crete airport in early 2018

Greek/Indian venture aims to start work on Crete airport in early 2018

Greek construction group GEK Terna and India’s GMR Infrastructure hope to start building a new 850-million-euro airport on Crete early next year, a source from GEK Terna said on Wednesday.

Greece on Tuesday awarded the contract to the Greek-Indian joint venture, which was the sole bidder.

It will build the airport via a private-public partnership and operate it for 37 years, subject to regulatory approval.

Athens has made several attempts since 2010 to build a new airport at Kasteli on Crete to replace the existing airport at Iraklio.

But the country’s seven-year debt crisis has made it difficult to attract investors.

“We hope we can start construction works at the beginning of 2018, if all the necessary procedures move fast,” an official at GEK Terna told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

The cost of contructing the new airport has been estimated at 480 million euros, with the state offering 180 million euros to acquire a 46 percent stake in it. The joint venture will own the rest.

The total investment is 850 million euros.

[Reuters]

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