Dubai firm buys Heathrow airport’s ground operations

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Britain’s Go-Ahead Group PLC said Thursday it was selling most of the Heathrow and Manchester services to Dnata, a travel services provider owned by the Investment Corporation of Dubai for 15 million pounds ($ 25 million).

The Investment Corporation of Dubai, which owns the Emirates airline and major aluminum and infrastructure industries, is the second of two state-owned companies alongside Dubai World – the company that kicked off last week’s stock market slump when it announced it was seeking to delay repaying some of its $ 60 billion in debt.
Dnata already provides ground handling services at 17 airports in Dubai, Singapore, Switzerland, Philippines, Australia, Pakistan and China.
Go-Ahead also said that its ground services operations at another 11 British airports, including London’s Luton and Gatwick and Scotland’s Edinburgh and Glasgow, will be sold to France’s Servisair.
Both deals are expected to close at the end of January 2010. The British company, which also runs profitable bus and commuter train franchises in the capital, is selling off the airports businesses in a bid to boost its books.
It is retaining just a small number of activities at Heathrow, primarily to support remaining ground handling contracts at Terminal 1.
Any gains made on the sale will be wiped out by residual liabilities and expected losses, resulting in the company booking a 20 million pound writeoff in the first half of the financial year, it said.

 

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