Coordinates: 24°53′17.80″N 55°9′37.36″E / 24.8882778°N 55.1603778°E / 24.8882778; 55.1603778

Al Maktoum International Airport

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Al Maktoum International Airport

مطار آل مكتوم الدولي

Maṭār Āl Maktūm al-Duwalī
Satellite view of the airport
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorDubai Airports Company
ServesEmirate of Dubai
LocationJebel Ali, United Arab Emirates
Opened27 June 2010; 13 years ago (2010-06-27)[1]
Hub forEmirates SkyCargo
Time zoneUAE Standard Time (UTC+04:00)
Elevation AMSL170 ft / 52 m
Coordinates24°53′17.80″N 55°9′37.36″E / 24.8882778°N 55.1603778°E / 24.8882778; 55.1603778
Websitewww.dubaiairports.ae
Map
OMDW is located in United Arab Emirates
OMDW
OMDW
Location in the UAE
OMDW is located in Persian Gulf
OMDW
OMDW
OMDW (Persian Gulf)
OMDW is located in Indian Ocean
OMDW
OMDW
OMDW (Indian Ocean)
OMDW is located in Middle East
OMDW
OMDW
OMDW (Middle East)
OMDW is located in West and Central Asia
OMDW
OMDW
OMDW (West and Central Asia)
OMDW is located in Asia
OMDW
OMDW
OMDW (Asia)
OMDW is located in Eurasia
OMDW
OMDW
OMDW (Eurasia)
OMDW is located in Afro-Eurasia
OMDW
OMDW
OMDW (Afro-Eurasia)
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
12/30 4,500 14,764 Asphalt
13/31 1,838 6,030 Asphalt
Sourceː UAE AIP[2]

Al Maktoum International Airport (IATA: DWC, ICAO: OMDW), also known as Dubai World Central,[3] is an international airport in Jebel Ali, 37 kilometres (23 mi) southwest of[2] Dubai, United Arab Emirates, that opened on June  27, 2010.[1] It is the main part of Dubai South, a planned residential, commercial and logistics complex.

When fully completed (originally expected 2027, now in 2030[4]), the airport will contain transport modes, logistics, and value-added services, including manufacturing and assembly, in a single free economic zone.[5][clarification needed] It will cover an area of 14,000 hectares (35,000 acres). The airport has a projected annual capacity of 12 million tonnes (12,000,000 long tons; 13,000,000 short tons) of freight and between 160 million[6] and 260 million passengers.[7] As of 2021, only a handful of airlines operated passenger services out of Al Maktoum International Airport with a focus on freight activity.

History

Construction

The 4,500 m × 60 m (14,800 ft × 200 ft) runway was completed in 2007 after 600 days of construction with tests planned over the following six to eight months in order to fulfill its CAT III-C requirements.[8][9] Construction of the airport's cargo terminal, the Al Maktoum Airport Cargo Gateway, which cost around US$75 million, was 50% complete by the end of 2008.[10]

During the first phase of the project, the airport was planned to handle around 200,000 t (200,000 long tons; 220,000 short tons) of cargo per year, with the possibility of increasing to 800,000 t (790,000 long tons; 880,000 short tons).[10] The passenger terminal at this phase was designed to have a capacity of 5 million passengers per year.[11] It was planned to be the largest airport in the world in terms of freight handled, moving up to 12 million tonnes (12,000,000 long tons; 13,000,000 short tons) per year in 2013.[needs update][10]

The project was originally expected to be fully operational by 2017, although the 2007–2012 global financial crisis subsequently postponed the completion of the complex to 2027. Previous working names for the airport complex have included "Jebel Ali International Airport", "Jebel Ali Airport City", and "Dubai World Central International Airport". The airport was eventually named the Al Maktoum International Airport after the House of Maktoum which rules the Emirate of Dubai.[12] The total cost of the airport was been estimated by the Dubai government to be $82 billion.[13]

Operations

Al Maktoum International Airport opened on June 24, 2010 with one runway and only cargo flights.[1] The first flight into the airport occurred on June 20, 2010, when an Emirates SkyCargo Boeing 777F landed after a flight from Hong Kong. The flight served as a test for various functions such as air traffic control, movement of aircraft on the ground, and security. According to Emirates, the flight was an "unmitigated success".[14]

On February  24, 2011, the airport was certified to handle passenger aircraft with up to 60 passengers.[15] The first passenger aircraft touched down on February 28, 2011, an Airbus A319CJ.[16] The airport officially opened for passenger flights on October 26, 2013 with Nas Air and Wizz Air as the two carriers to operate from the airport.[17]

In the first quarter of 2014, 102,000 passengers went through the airport.[18] At the time of its opening, three cargo service airlines served Al Maktoum International Airport, including RUS Aviation, Skyline Air and Aerospace Consortium. Fifteen additional airlines then signed a contract to operate flights to the airport.[19]

Passenger numbers in the first half of 2016 totaled 410,278, up from 209,989 in the first half of 2015.[20] Low usage of the facility led to it being described as a white elephant.[21]

Expansion plans

On April 28, 2024, Emirates announced that the ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, had approved a major expansion of Al Maktoum International Airport with the construction of a new 128 billion AED ($34.85 billion USD) passenger terminal.[22] When complete, the airport is expected to be the largest in the world at roughly five times the size of the existing Dubai International Airport with capacity for up to 260 million passengers.[22] Plans call for the airport to include five parallel runways and 400 aircraft gates.[23] All Emirates and Flydubai operations are expected to be transferred to the new airport by 2034.[23]

Airlines and destinations

Passenger

AirlinesDestinations
Azimuth Mineralnye Vody, Sochi
Air Cairo Sharm El Sheikh[24]
Berniq Airways Benghazi[25]
Enter Air Seasonal: Katowice,[26] Poznań,[26] Warsaw–Chopin[26]
FlyOne Chișinău
Hunnu Air Ulaanbaatar[27]
Luxair Seasonal: Luxembourg
Pobeda Makhachkala,[28] Moscow–Vnukovo, Vladikavkaz, Volgograd[29]
Rossiya Airlines Saint Petersburg,[30] Sochi
S7 Airlines Moscow–Domodedovo,[31] Novosibirsk[32]
Smartlynx Airlines Seasonal charter: Berlin,[33] Leipzig-Halle[34][35]
Smartwings Bratislava, Prague[36]
Transavia Amsterdam (begins 30 March 2025)
Ural Airlines Moscow–Domodedovo,[37] Yekaterinburg[37]
Seasonal: Sochi[38]
Utair Grozny,[39] Surgut[39]
Seasonal: Tyumen[40]

Cargo

AirlinesDestinations
Aerotranscargo[41][42] Fujairah, Hanoi, Hong Kong, Riyadh, Zhengzhou
Astral Aviation[43][44] Aktobe, Hong Kong, Johannesburg–O. R. Tambo, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta
Atlas Air[45] Delhi
Cargolux[citation needed] Hong Kong, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Luxembourg City, Kuala Lumpur–International
Cargolux Italia[citation needed] Milan–Malpensa
Cathay Cargo[citation needed] Amsterdam, Frankfurt, Hong Kong, London–Heathrow, Riyadh
China Airlines Cargo[46] Amsterdam, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Frankfurt, Hanoi, Luxembourg, Prague, Taipei–Taoyuan
Emirates SkyCargo[47] Addis Ababa, Ahmedabad, Algiers, Amsterdam,[48] Auckland,[49] Barcelona, Bangkok–Suvarnabhumi, Bengaluru, Bogotá, Brussels, Cairo, Chicago–O'Hare, Dakar–Senghor, Dammam, Dhaka, Djibouti, Entebbe, Frankfurt, Guangzhou, Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, Houston–Intercontinental, Jakarta–Soekarno-Hatta, Johannesburg–O.R. Tambo, Khartoum, Lagos, Liège, Lilongwe, London–Heathrow, Maastricht/Aachen, Madrid, Mexico City, Milan–Malpensa, Mumbai, Nairobi–Jomo Kenyatta, New York–JFK, Ouagadougou, Phnom Penh, Quito, Riyadh, Shanghai–Pudong, Singapore, Sydney, Taipei–Taoyuan, Tokyo–Narita, Zaragoza
Egyptair Cargo[citation needed] Cairo
Lufthansa Cargo[citation needed] Hong Kong, Frankfurt
Kalitta Air[citation needed] Brussels
MASKargo[citation needed] Amsterdam, Kuala Lumpur–International
Qatar Airways Cargo[citation needed] Doha
Turkish Cargo[50] Hyderabad, Istanbul
Turkmenistan Airlines Cargo[51] Ashgabat
YTO Cargo Airlines[citation needed] Hangzhou

References

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  2. ^ a b "United Arab Emirates AIP". Archived from the original on February 9, 2019. Retrieved February 4, 2019.
  3. ^ "DWC Dubai World Central". www.dubaiairports.ae.
  4. ^ "Dubai plans $33bn airport mega project: Report". Arabian Business. April 8, 2023. Retrieved May 27, 2023.
  5. ^ "A whole new world". venturemagazine – Ventureonline. Schofield Publishing Ltd. June 20, 2007. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013.
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  34. ^ "FTI® - Beim Reiseveranstalter Urlaub & Reisen günstig buchen". www.fti.de.
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External links