Audio By Carbonatix
President Nana Akufo-Addo has inspected ongoing work on the construction of the Kumasi International Airport, which, according to the contractor, is currently 77% complete, and is expected to be completed in June 2022.

President Akufo-Addo visited the site of the construction on Friday when he commenced his four-day working visit to the Ashanti Region, as part of his annual working visits to all the regions of the country.

On June 6, 2018, the President cut the sod for the commencement of work on Phase Two of the Kumasi Airport Project, where he indicated that “the expansion of this airport is a critical part of government’s vision to expand the frontiers of the aviation industry in the country and to realise the dream of making Ghana an aviation hub in West Africa.”

Inspecting work on the site, the President was told that the terminal building was 88% complete, the road network 93% complete, the Apron 89% complete, with the air traffic control and rescue and firefighting services 53% complete.

The scope of work includes the extension of existing runway pavement from 1,981 metres to 2,320 metres, the construction of a new taxi link and apron, two new apron parking stands, aeronautical ground lighting systems, the design and building of a terminal with the capacity to handle 800,000 passengers per annum, an 11 MW substation, as well the provision of new bulk utility (electricity, water, sewage treatment system, internet etc.) services, independent of the existing utility services for the existing airport facilities.

Phase three of the project involves the construction of the air traffic control building, a fire building station, as well as the expansion of the existing runway pavement. The construction of the fuel farm is to be funded by GOIL.

With the project being constructed by Messrs. Contracta Construction UK Limited, the total project sum is €124.9 million, with financing from Santander, Deutche Bank, and UKEF.

President Akufo-Addo expressed satisfaction with the progress of work undertaken so far, and charged the Ministry of Transport as well as the Contractor to ensure that the October 2022 deadline for completion is met.
Latest Stories
-
Chalamet beats DiCaprio to Golden Globes glory
39 minutes -
Pro-Bawumia group launched in Belgium ahead of NPP primaries
50 minutes -
Mahama departs for World Economic Forum
1 hour -
Photos: Star glamour on the Golden Globes red carpet
1 hour -
US film stars Meagan Good and Jonathan Majors become Guinea citizens after DNA tests
1 hour -
He once criticised African leaders who cling to power. Now Museveni wants a 7th term
2 hours -
Malaysia and Indonesia block Musk’s Grok over sexually explicit deepfakes
2 hours -
US Justice Department opens criminal probe into Fed chair Jerome Powell
2 hours -
Meta blocks 550,000 accounts under Australia’s social media ban
2 hours -
Golden Globes 2026: The full list of winners and nominees
3 hours -
Wizkid becomes first African artist to surpass 10 billion streams on Spotify
6 hours -
Actor Yomi Gold hospitalised in Morocco after sudden health scare
6 hours -
Sabalenka beats Kostyuk to win third Brisbane title
6 hours -
Google employee made redundant after reporting manager who showed nude of wife, court hears
6 hours -
‘Big personality’ Martinelli goes from ‘idiot’ to hat-trick hero
7 hours
