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FAAN Launches Drive to Groom Next Generation of Aviation Professionals

Director of Special Duties at FAAN, Mrs. Obiageli Orah, alongside other participants, industry professionals and students, during a group photograph at the FAAN Next Generation of Aviation Professionals (NGAP) programme aimed at inspiring future talent in Nigeria’s aviation sector.

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The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria has rolled out a forward-looking initiative aimed at securing the future of Nigeria’s aviation industry by nurturing the next generation of skilled professionals.

The programme, targeted at secondary school students, is designed to bridge critical manpower gaps in key areas such as piloting, aeronautical engineering, aviation security and firefighting.

Led by FAAN’s General Manager, Training and Human Resource Development, Dr. Oluwatoyin Akinlade, the initiative aligns with the International Civil Aviation Organization’s Next Generation of Aviation Professionals (NGAP) framework.

Speaking at the programme’s launch, Akinlade said the effort is focused on raising early awareness among young people, particularly in addressing gender imbalance across technical roles in the aviation sector.

“We are creating awareness for the younger generation to see aviation as an exciting and viable career path,” she said, noting the shortage of professionals—especially women—in fields such as piloting and engineering.

The initiative goes beyond traditional aviation roles, showcasing opportunities in aviation medicine, aviation law and other specialised areas, broadening the industry’s appeal to students from diverse academic backgrounds.

The maiden edition featured interactive sessions with industry experts, including female pilots, medical professionals and specialists from the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency, giving students firsthand exposure to real-world aviation careers.

Participants drawn from schools such as Chrisland Schools engaged with professionals and explored emerging technologies, including drone operations, through collaborations with industry partners like Caverton.

FAAN says the programme also promotes Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM), helping students connect classroom learning with practical aviation applications.

Director of Special Duties at FAAN, Mrs. Obiageli Orah, encouraged the students to consider careers in aviation, describing the NGAP initiative as a strategic pathway to attracting young talent into the sector.

Secondary school students engage with aviation professionals during FAAN’s Next Generation of Aviation Professionals (NGAP) programme, aimed at inspiring young talent and bridging skills gaps in Nigeria’s aviation industry.

With plans to expand the programme to more schools nationwide, FAAN is positioning the initiative as a long-term investment in building a skilled, diverse and future-ready aviation workforce.

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AIRPORTS

FAAN, Air Force Forge Stronger Alliance to Secure Nigeria’s Airports

FAAN Managing Director, Mrs. Olubunmi Kuku and Air Vice Marshal Japhet Ekwuribe, Commander of the National Air Defence Corps during the visits to FAAN headquarters Lagos on Tuesday

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Nigeria’s aviation security architecture is set for a major boost as the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) and the Nigerian Air Force move to deepen collaboration in safeguarding the nation’s airports.

FAAN Managing Director, Mrs. Olubunmi Kuku, made this clear during a high-level engagement with the Commander of the National Air Defence Corps, Air Vice Marshal Japhet Ekwuribe, in Lagos, where both institutions reaffirmed their commitment to tighter operational synergy.

At the heart of the renewed partnership is a shared determination to stay ahead of evolving security threats within airport environments.

Kuku stressed that modern aviation security demands more than isolated efforts, highlighting the need for intelligence sharing, coordinated strategies, and sustained inter-agency cooperation.

“We are dealing with dynamic security challenges that require strong partnerships and proactive coordination,” she said, noting that FAAN remains committed to working closely with the Air Force on airside patrols, surveillance, and sensitive flight operations.

She also raised concern over increasing cases of land encroachment around airport perimeters, describing it as a critical risk to aviation infrastructure that requires urgent and collective action.

In response, Air Vice Marshal Ekwuribe commended FAAN’s leadership for its forward-thinking approach, describing the collaboration as a strategic step toward strengthening surveillance and rapid response capabilities across Nigeria’s airports.

“This engagement provides an opportunity to reinforce institutional ties and improve operational effectiveness in tackling shared security priorities,” he said.

Both parties agreed to develop practical frameworks that will enhance coordination, improve monitoring systems, and ensure swift responses to potential threats.

The renewed alliance signals a proactive shift in Nigeria’s aviation security posture, one that prioritizes collaboration, vigilance, and resilience in protecting critical national assets.

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Nigeria Defends Aviation Charges, Says Costs Reflect Sector Reforms

Mr. Henry Agbebire-Director of Public Affairs and Consumer Protection-Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria

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Nigeria has pushed back against claims of excessive aviation charges, arguing that current pricing reflects long-overdue reforms rather than inefficiency or overpricing.

Reacting to recent concerns raised by the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) says the country’s aviation charges must be understood within the context of decades of underinvestment and ongoing sector transformation.

In a detailed policy response, Director of Public Affairs and Consumer Protection at FAAN, Henry Agbebire, said the narrative portraying Nigeria as an expensive aviation market is “technically correct but strategically incomplete.”

“The real issue is not simply ‘high charges.’ It is why those charges exist,” Agbebire stated.

IATA had classified Nigeria among countries with aviation charges above global averages—a trend seen across Africa, where fees are estimated to be about 15 percent higher than global benchmarks. However, FAAN insists that focusing solely on pricing ignores deeper structural realities.

According to Agbebire, many of Nigeria’s recent tariff adjustments are not new burdens but corrections of long-standing underpricing. “You cannot run a 21st-century aviation system on 2002 pricing,” he said, noting that several charges remained unchanged for nearly two decades despite inflation and rising operational costs.

He pointed out that even revised tariffs remain competitive. For instance, cargo charges increased from ₦7 to ₦20 per kilogram still fall below inflation-adjusted values.

Beyond statutory charges, FAAN highlighted other major cost drivers often overlooked in global assessments. These include sharp increases in jet fuel prices—by as much as 300 percent—and foreign exchange constraints that once left up to $850 million in airline funds trapped in the country.

“These factors, spanning fuel, forex, and logistics, often outweigh statutory charges in determining ticket prices,” Agbebire explained.

He further emphasized that aviation development comes with unavoidable financial realities. “There is no version of aviation development that is both cheap and world-class,” he said.

Despite the challenges, FAAN maintained that Nigeria is actively reforming its aviation ecosystem. Government interventions in fuel pricing, efforts to improve cost transparency, and ongoing infrastructure upgrades are all part of a broader strategy to enhance competitiveness.

Agbebire stressed that aviation charges should be viewed as investments rather than mere costs. “If higher charges fund safer airports, modern infrastructure, improved passenger experience, and global compliance, then they are not merely costs; they are investments,” he said.

He concluded that Nigeria’s aviation sector is undergoing a necessary transition—one aimed at long-term sustainability and growth.

“The real story is not that Nigeria is expensive,” Agbebire added. “The real story is that Nigeria is paying the price of transformation.”

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FG, Bi-Courtney End 20-Year Airport Dispute in Landmark N132bn Deal Reset

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After more than two decades of legal battles and stalled aviation progress, Nigeria has finally cleared one of its most stubborn infrastructure roadblocks.

In a decisive breakthrough, the Federal Government has reached a historic settlement with Bi-Courtney Aviation Services Limited over the long-contested Murtala Muhammed Airport Terminal 2 (MM2) concession, bringing an end to a dispute that has lingered for over 20 years.

The agreement, brokered by Aviation Minister Festus Keyamo and approved by the Federal Executive Council (FEC) in Abuja, delivers sweeping concessions on both sides in what officials describe as a “win-win” resolution with immediate economic impact.

At the heart of the deal is Bi-Courtney’s decision to forgo its N132 billion Supreme Court judgment debt against the Federal Government. The company has also relinquished its exclusivity rights tied to the MM2 concession and handed back control of the Murtala Muhammed Airport Terminal 1 (MM1).

In exchange, the Federal Government has restored Bi-Courtney’s rights to complete and operate its long-delayed hotel and conference centre project within the airport axis under a revenue-sharing framework.

The agreement goes beyond dispute resolution—it resets the commercial architecture of Lagos aviation. Plans are already underway to relocate regional flight operations to MM2, supported by apron expansion to handle increased aircraft movement. This is expected to unlock immediate revenue streams for the government while maximizing the underutilized terminal’s capacity.

Industry observers say the deal removes long-standing legal and operational bottlenecks that have hindered major aviation projects, including the proposed Lekki International Airport.

The settlement also aligns with broader sector reforms, notably plans to establish a private-sector-driven aircraft leasing company aimed at improving Nigerian airlines’ access to modern fleets under competitive terms.

Minister Keyamo praised the spirit of compromise shown by all parties, noting that the agreement reflects a renewed commitment to investment-friendly policies and sustainable aviation growth.

The resolution was further strengthened by the collaboration between Keyamo and Bi-Courtney Chairman Wale Babalakin, whose shared professional background and alignment on national interest helped drive negotiations to a successful close.

With this deal, Nigeria not only ends a costly legal chapter but opens a new runway for aviation expansion, anchored on cooperation, efficiency, and long-term value creation.

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