M&A consultants Falkenstegts are looking for investors to revive Germany's Frankfurt-Hahn Airport Group that filed for bankruptcy in October, reports London's Air Cargo News.
Provisional insolvency administrator Jan Markus Plathner has commissioned Dusseldorf-based Falkensteg to 'look for one or more investors for the German Frankfurt-Hahn Airport Group or its assets including the property'.
Investors have the option of acquiring all assets, units to be defined or single assets.
Said Falkensteg: 'Among other things, Frankfurt-Hahn Airport in Rhineland-Palatinate is comprised of various operating properties and expansion areas, a 3,800-metre runway, as well as a 24-hour operating permit which enables flight operations around the clock, 365 days a year.
'Several airlines offer numerous connections in passenger traffic, worldwide cargo connections are also in existence. At the airport, hangars with a separate truck access road are available for air cargo handling,' said the Falkensteg statement,
The statement added that, since 2017, the demand for air cargo has been steadily increasing at Frankfurt-Hahn.
'A total of around 233,000 tonnes were handled in 2020, making the hub number four in German air cargo, after the airports of frankfurt am Main, Leipzig/Halle and Cologne/Bonn, and well ahead of the air traffic hub Munich.'
Falkensteg said that Frankfurt-Hahn is located in the middle of one of the most important economic areas in Europe: the so-called Blue Banana, which stretches across western Europe from Marseilles to London via Switzerland, western Germany and the Benelux countries.
Falkensteg will conduct 'a broad market approach addressing national and international investors in a public tender procedure'.
Interested parties will be informed about Frankfurt-Hahn Airport by means of a special data room. Expressions of interest in participating in the sale process should be submitted in writing to Falkensteg by 10am GMT on December 20.
SeaNews Turkey
Provisional insolvency administrator Jan Markus Plathner has commissioned Dusseldorf-based Falkensteg to 'look for one or more investors for the German Frankfurt-Hahn Airport Group or its assets including the property'.
Investors have the option of acquiring all assets, units to be defined or single assets.
Said Falkensteg: 'Among other things, Frankfurt-Hahn Airport in Rhineland-Palatinate is comprised of various operating properties and expansion areas, a 3,800-metre runway, as well as a 24-hour operating permit which enables flight operations around the clock, 365 days a year.
'Several airlines offer numerous connections in passenger traffic, worldwide cargo connections are also in existence. At the airport, hangars with a separate truck access road are available for air cargo handling,' said the Falkensteg statement,
The statement added that, since 2017, the demand for air cargo has been steadily increasing at Frankfurt-Hahn.
'A total of around 233,000 tonnes were handled in 2020, making the hub number four in German air cargo, after the airports of frankfurt am Main, Leipzig/Halle and Cologne/Bonn, and well ahead of the air traffic hub Munich.'
Falkensteg said that Frankfurt-Hahn is located in the middle of one of the most important economic areas in Europe: the so-called Blue Banana, which stretches across western Europe from Marseilles to London via Switzerland, western Germany and the Benelux countries.
Falkensteg will conduct 'a broad market approach addressing national and international investors in a public tender procedure'.
Interested parties will be informed about Frankfurt-Hahn Airport by means of a special data room. Expressions of interest in participating in the sale process should be submitted in writing to Falkensteg by 10am GMT on December 20.
SeaNews Turkey