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Behold the Titans

The Vistion, Commitment and Expense of YVRAS

Written by David Olsen   
394-titan













In 1994, Vancouver Airport senior VP and general manager Frank O’Neill took the fledgling Vancouver Airport Services (YVRAS) into the international airport services arena to do battle with the airport giants of the time. Opening for business with just two employees and a little start-up money from the Vancouver Airport Authority, by 2007 YVRAS had contracts at 18 airports in seven countries handling 27 million passengers per year. In 2006 O’Neill passed the torch to current CEO George Casey who, with US$400 million revenue under management, underlines profitability as a key YVRAS target.

Right from the start, access to capital was the key factor for YVRAS success, and maintaining access is a high priority. Taking advantage of the capital invested by YVR in YVRAS, Casey is bringing like-minded infrastructure investors together to create a new investment group to pursue global opportunities, particularly in the OECD market. The bottom line, says Casey, is that YVRAS has been successful in managing assets to create value and growth, and is looking to leverage that with like-minded partners. The YVRAS-managed airports have had an injection of US$1.4 billion in capital expansion since 1995.

Asked why YVRAS is the only Canadian airport operator that got into the business, did well and stayed the course, Casey and operations VP Coleen Rogers (previously VP at Winnipeg International) emphasize three key success factors:

Vision – in 1994 YVR was visionary in seeing where the market was going both globally and in Canada. Commitment – YVRAS committed to seeing it through.

Expertise – an ability to execute projects, combined with the success of YVR as a centre of excellence.

YVRAS achieved early success, based on a sound bidding strategy, learning from each bid and paying attention to how other concessions perform. Building on that foundation it has paced its growth, managing each new airport to maximize value and increase customer service.

Is the YVRAS governance model an advantage, allowing freedom of action without being stalked by predators? Casey and Rogers certainly think so – “it allows us to operate as a fully commercial entity to pursue opportunities in North America and abroad. The board works well and carries out its fiduciary responsibility to ensure that we are a viable entity.” The Vancouver Airport Authority has been unwavering in its support, even during the post-9/11 downturn, while YVRAS is self-sustaining in capital and cash, thanks to the commercial rigour of the company and the focus on profitability and customer service.

However, Rogers points out, YVRAS does not get a free ride from its parent – YVRAS pays the Authority for the services it uses and is focused on providing a return on capital invested by the Authority.

Asked to identify the factors for future success, Casey sees YVRAS as being focused on the OECD market, “but we will look at non-OECD opportunities as well. We will identify growth opportunities and build on our successful track record, based on our brand and our operating philosophy”.

The brand is a key factor for YVRAS customers and Casey summarizes it as “creating a sense of place and a transfer of technology to the local environment”. Casey and Rogers cite the YVRAS success at Nassau as a good example – “we stood out in our application of our brand and operating philosophy.”

To stay ahead of the competition YVRAS concentrates on the key business drivers. As Casey defines it, “we focus on building passenger and cargo traffic and building cost-effective facilities on time. We have a flexible cost structure; we maximize nonaeronautical revenues, optimize our financing capabilities and focus on stakeholder relationships.”

So where does YVRAS go from here? Casey sees the opportunity to buy bigger shares of existing airport businesses and to acquire additional airports and additional shares. At Hamilton ON, YVRAS now has a 100% shareholding in Trade- Port International Corporation.

“We are growing the airports we already manage,” says Rogers, “including investment from the owners – for example, Cranbrook, Kamloops and Moncton.” YVRAS is managing the Cranbrook terminal building expansion and extension of the runway to 8,000 feet, making it a potential destination for long-haul direct flights. This was hard on the heels of a new terminal building at Fort St. John and the next project will be Kamloops. Meanwhile, three of the five fastest growing airports in Canada in 2006 are operated by YVRAS, led by Hamilton with more than 20% growth year on year.

Rogers highlights the “network synergies” that provide savings by having a number of airports under management. An example was the presence of the YVRAS marketing director at the international tourism fair ITB Berlin 2007, helping Moncton, Hamilton, Cranbrook, Kamloops and other airports to bring in more German, French, and other tourists.

YVRAS has to manage the demands of airports spanning time zones from Cyprus to Chile to British Columbia – and not just upgrades. In the Dominican Republic, with local partners in the Aerodom consortium, YVRAS manages six airports including Las Americas International serving the capital, Santo Domingo. The development of the new Samana airport on a greenfield site at El Catey on the north coast tested the skill and know-how of YVRAS senior operations director Colin Lowndes and Aerodom operations director Andrew O’Brian. Despite the logistic challenges, the airport with its 3,000-metre runway opened on time, with the first flight arriving from Germany on Nov. 6, 2006.

Lowndes and O’Brian typify the cosmopolitan experience of the people who keep the YVRAS airports running 24/7. Both Canadians, they speak fluent Spanish and worked overseas before joining YVRAS.

Latest airport in the YVRAS portfolio is Nassau, with a 10-year contract to manage Lynden Pindling Airport for Nassau Airport Development Corporation. YVRAS broke new ground in Nassau, as Casey explains: “We made a strategic decision to bid on our own with no partners, and won.” YVRAS placed the executive expatriate team in Nassau, headed by Craig Richmond (previously VP Operations at Vancouver International) and has trained local employees at Vancouver. Richmond is managing the US$300-million capital expansion project and, in his own words “has a vision to transform Nassau Airport into the jewel of the Caribbean.”

Cyprus is an exciting challenge for Casey and the YVRAS team – a European opportunity with multinational partners in a $600-million, 25-year build, operate and transfer concession. It is the largest financing undertaken by YVRAS, with local partners and an international team that includes French construction giant Bouygues and ‘Celtic tiger’ Aer Rianta International (a.k.a. Dublin Airport). The three-year bidding process for Larnaca and Paphos airports was, Casey reflects, “an excellent experience based on cultural adaptability and involving all our strengths.” Cyprus tested the bidders’ strengths to the full. Discussions began in 2001 and the Hermes Airports Ltd. team, led by Bouygues, YVRAS, Egis Projects and Cyprus Trading Corp., achieved success in 2005. Within two months of the transfer, Larnaca and Paphos handled 50,000 refugees from Lebanon, during what was already a peak traffic period.

Casey sees China and India as potential opportunities – the latter following the privatization of Mumbai (Bombay) and Delhi airports in 2006 – but remains focused on management of the risks associated with growth. The success by Frankfurt Airport at Delhi and Airports Corporation of South Africa at Mumbai came after a long and expensive period of bidding against major international players such as BAA and Macquarie and was immediately followed by a nationwide strike of airport workers protesting privatization. YVRAS is keeping its eye on Chennai (Madras) and Kolkata (Calcutta) where the Indian government is planning to go the same route and where lessons will be learned from Mumbai and Delhi.

“The key to success is to manage your way through the fluctuations in the business,” says Casey. “We will look for expansion to the UK and continental Europe and possibly in the US – Chicago Midway comes to mind. We may look at Asia, including India, but that will depend on access to capital – our key focus at present is east and south.”